How to Do Things with Dead People History, Technology, and Temporality from Shakespeare to Warhol

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Synopsis

How to Do Things with Dead People studies human contrivances for representing and relating to the dead. Alice Dailey takes as her principal objects of inquiry Shakespeare's English history plays, describing them as reproductive mechanisms by which living replicas of dead historical figures are regenerated in the present and re-killed. Considering the plays in these terms exposes their affinity with a transhistorical array of technologies for producing, reproducing, and interacting with dead things—technologies such as literary doppelgängers, photography, ventriloquist puppetry, X-ray imaging, glitch art, capital punishment machines, and cloning. By situating Shakespeare's historical drama in this intermedial conversation, Dailey challenges conventional assumptions about what constitutes the context of a work of art and contests foundational models of linear temporality that inform long-standing conceptions of historical periodization and teleological order. Working from an eclectic body of theories, pictures, and machines that transcend time and media, Dailey composes a searching exploration of how the living use the dead to think back and look forward, to rule, to love, to wish and create.

Book details

Author:
Alice Dailey
ISBN:
9781501763663
Related ISBNs:
9781501763670, 9781501763656
Publisher:
Cornell University Press
Pages:
264
Reading age:
18+
Includes images:
Yes
Date of addition:
2022-06-14
Usage restrictions:
Copyright
Copyright date:
2021
Copyright by:
The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc./Licensed by ARS. 
Adult content:
No
Language:
English
Categories:
Drama, Plays and Theater, Language Arts, Literature and Fiction