Re-envisioning the Everyday
American Genre Scenes, 1905-1945
John Fagg
Re-envisioning the Everyday
American Genre Scenes, 1905-1945
John Fagg
“In embracing and rethinking ‘the genre of genre,’ Fagg restitutes ‘the small things that get swept aside by grand narratives.’ That alone would make this a pioneering volume, but it is in fact only one of many contributions of this scholarship.”
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- Reviews
- Bio
- Table of Contents
- Sample Chapters
- Subjects
Working with and against the established narrative of American genre painting’s late nineteenth-century decline into obsolescence, John Fagg explores how artists and illustrators used elements of the tradition to picture everyday life in a rapidly changing society, whether by appealing to its nostalgic and historical connotations or by updating it to address new formal and thematic concerns. Fagg argues that genre painting enabled twentieth-century artists to look slowly and carefully at scenes of everyday life and, on some occasions, to understand those scenes as sites of political oppression and resistance. But it also limited them to anachronistic ways of seeing and tied them to a freighted history of stereotyping and condescension.
By surveying genre painting when its status and relevance were uncertain and by looking at works that stretch and complicate its boundaries, this book considers what the form is and probes the wider practice of generic categorization. It will appeal to students and scholars of American art history, art criticism, and cultural studies.
“In embracing and rethinking ‘the genre of genre,’ Fagg restitutes ‘the small things that get swept aside by grand narratives.’ That alone would make this a pioneering volume, but it is in fact only one of many contributions of this scholarship.”
“Re-envisioning the Everyday assembles a surprising cast of characters and visual styles around the category of ‘genre,’ reconsidering what the term can be said to encompass and describe.”
John Fagg is Senior Lecturer in American Literature and Culture at the University of Birmingham. He is the author of On the Cusp: Stephen Crane, George Bellows, and Modernism and curator of Bellows and the Body and New York City Life: John Sloan’s Prints.
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Genre Painting in a New Century: Jerome Myers, Edmund C. Tarbell, and Elizabeth Shippen Green
2. John Sloan’s Intimate Tenements
3. Brand Ordinary: Norman Rockwell and the Commercial Illustration of Everyday Life
4. The 1930s Genre Painting Revival
5. Ben Shahn and Jacob Lawrence: Beyond Genre Painting
Conclusion: A Genre America
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Download a PDF sample chapter here: http://www.psupress.org/sample_chapter/Fagg_Introduction.pdf target= blank>Introduction
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