語系:
繁體中文
English
說明(常見問題)
回圖書館首頁
手機版館藏查詢
登入
回首頁
切換:
標籤
|
MARC模式
|
ISBD
Exhibiting domesticity: The home, th...
~
Taylor, Kathryn Rose.
FindBook
Google Book
Amazon
博客來
Exhibiting domesticity: The home, the museum, and queer space in American literature, 1914--1937.
紀錄類型:
書目-語言資料,印刷品 : Monograph/item
正題名/作者:
Exhibiting domesticity: The home, the museum, and queer space in American literature, 1914--1937./
作者:
Taylor, Kathryn Rose.
面頁冊數:
183 p.
附註:
Adviser: Michael North.
Contained By:
Dissertation Abstracts International67-07A.
標題:
Art History. -
電子資源:
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=3226079
ISBN:
9780542797088
Exhibiting domesticity: The home, the museum, and queer space in American literature, 1914--1937.
Taylor, Kathryn Rose.
Exhibiting domesticity: The home, the museum, and queer space in American literature, 1914--1937.
- 183 p.
Adviser: Michael North.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of California, Los Angeles, 2006.
Historical and theoretical considerations of queer space and modernism generally exclude the domestic in favor of public scenes as the site of challenges to bourgeois normative culture. Three lesbian modernists, however, located such challenges in a restructured domesticity that disrupts easy distinctions between public and private space, particularly the notion that private space is overwhelmingly traditional and non-political. Using the figure of the museum/home, Gertrude Stein, Willa Cather, and Djuna Barnes portray same-sex domesticity not as invisible, apolitical space, but as hybrid public/private space that engages with the problems that visibility posed for homosexuals in the first half of the century. Stein, who lived in a museum/home, saw in this figure the uselessness that she associated with art, and with which she characterized her own same-sex relationship. In Tender Buttons, as in the physical space she shared with Alice B. Toklas, she challenges the usefulness of standard private space as a representation of social and sexual relationships. Cather, in The Professor's House, rejects the museum/home as too tied to institutional and political control over the individual. Thus, while the text idealizes spaces that seem to join private desires and public work in the shape of a museum/home, these spaces fail precisely because of the appeal to the public that is bound up in their gestures toward the museum. In Nightwood and in her early journalism, Barnes's homosexual characters attempt to reconfigure domestic life---expressed in the metaphor of the museum/home---so that it is visible and yet safe from outside attack. This reconfiguration makes private space into a particular kind of public arena. The museum's flexible space becomes a figure of the strange relationship between public and private created by the closet and extensively analyzed in Nightwood by the character Doctor Matthew O'Connor. While each of these authors portrays varying degrees of success in the museum/home as a model for queer space, they all see the potential that figure has to disrupt the standard gender and sexual assumptions that were part of the popular image of domesticity. These assumptions were also challenged on the level of material culture, particularly in an exhibit of mass-produced industrial and domestic objects displayed by the Museum of Modern Art in 1934, titled "Machine Art." In a final chapter, I explore this exhibit as an embodiment of the queer potential arising from the mingling of domestic and museum space, and public and private objects.
ISBN: 9780542797088Subjects--Topical Terms:
635474
Art History.
Exhibiting domesticity: The home, the museum, and queer space in American literature, 1914--1937.
LDR
:03540nam 2200301 a 45
001
973812
005
20110928
008
110928s2006 eng d
020
$a
9780542797088
035
$a
(UnM)AAI3226079
035
$a
AAI3226079
040
$a
UnM
$c
UnM
100
1
$a
Taylor, Kathryn Rose.
$3
1297762
245
1 0
$a
Exhibiting domesticity: The home, the museum, and queer space in American literature, 1914--1937.
300
$a
183 p.
500
$a
Adviser: Michael North.
500
$a
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 67-07, Section: A, page: 2584.
502
$a
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of California, Los Angeles, 2006.
520
$a
Historical and theoretical considerations of queer space and modernism generally exclude the domestic in favor of public scenes as the site of challenges to bourgeois normative culture. Three lesbian modernists, however, located such challenges in a restructured domesticity that disrupts easy distinctions between public and private space, particularly the notion that private space is overwhelmingly traditional and non-political. Using the figure of the museum/home, Gertrude Stein, Willa Cather, and Djuna Barnes portray same-sex domesticity not as invisible, apolitical space, but as hybrid public/private space that engages with the problems that visibility posed for homosexuals in the first half of the century. Stein, who lived in a museum/home, saw in this figure the uselessness that she associated with art, and with which she characterized her own same-sex relationship. In Tender Buttons, as in the physical space she shared with Alice B. Toklas, she challenges the usefulness of standard private space as a representation of social and sexual relationships. Cather, in The Professor's House, rejects the museum/home as too tied to institutional and political control over the individual. Thus, while the text idealizes spaces that seem to join private desires and public work in the shape of a museum/home, these spaces fail precisely because of the appeal to the public that is bound up in their gestures toward the museum. In Nightwood and in her early journalism, Barnes's homosexual characters attempt to reconfigure domestic life---expressed in the metaphor of the museum/home---so that it is visible and yet safe from outside attack. This reconfiguration makes private space into a particular kind of public arena. The museum's flexible space becomes a figure of the strange relationship between public and private created by the closet and extensively analyzed in Nightwood by the character Doctor Matthew O'Connor. While each of these authors portrays varying degrees of success in the museum/home as a model for queer space, they all see the potential that figure has to disrupt the standard gender and sexual assumptions that were part of the popular image of domesticity. These assumptions were also challenged on the level of material culture, particularly in an exhibit of mass-produced industrial and domestic objects displayed by the Museum of Modern Art in 1934, titled "Machine Art." In a final chapter, I explore this exhibit as an embodiment of the queer potential arising from the mingling of domestic and museum space, and public and private objects.
590
$a
School code: 0031.
650
4
$a
Art History.
$3
635474
650
4
$a
Literature, American.
$3
1017657
650
4
$a
Museology.
$3
1018504
650
4
$a
Women's Studies.
$3
1017481
690
$a
0377
690
$a
0453
690
$a
0591
690
$a
0730
710
2 0
$a
University of California, Los Angeles.
$3
626622
773
0
$t
Dissertation Abstracts International
$g
67-07A.
790
$a
0031
790
1 0
$a
North, Michael,
$e
advisor
791
$a
Ph.D.
792
$a
2006
856
4 0
$u
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=3226079
筆 0 讀者評論
館藏地:
全部
電子資源
出版年:
卷號:
館藏
1 筆 • 頁數 1 •
1
條碼號
典藏地名稱
館藏流通類別
資料類型
索書號
使用類型
借閱狀態
預約狀態
備註欄
附件
W9132069
電子資源
11.線上閱覽_V
電子書
EB W9132069
一般使用(Normal)
在架
0
1 筆 • 頁數 1 •
1
多媒體
評論
新增評論
分享你的心得
Export
取書館
處理中
...
變更密碼
登入