1st Edition

Judging the Image Art, Value, Law

By Alison Young Copyright 2005
    204 Pages 15 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    208 Pages 15 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Art, value, law - the links between these three terms mark a history of struggle in the cultural scene. Studies of contemporary culture have thus increasingly turned to the image as central to the production of legitimacy, aesthetics and order. Judging the Image extends the cultural turn in legal and criminological studies by interrogating our responses to the image. This book provides a space to think through problems of ethics, social authority and the legal imagination. Concepts of memory and interpretation, violence and aesthetic, authority and legitimacy are considered in a diverse range of sites, including:

    * body, performance and regulation
    * judgment, censorship and controversial artworks
    * graffiti and the aesthetics of public space
    * HIV and the art of the disappearing body
    * witnessing, ethics and the performance of suffering
    * memorial images - art in the wake of disaster.

    Chapter 1 The capture of the subject; Chapter 2 Aesthetic vertigo; Chapter 2a viewing (de) position; Chapter 3 Written on the skin of the city; Chapter 3a viewing (de)position; Chapter 4 Disappearing images and the laws of appearance; Chapter 4a viewing (de)position; Chapter 5 The art of injury and the ethics of witnessing; Chapter 5a viewing (de)position; Chapter 6 All that remains; Notes; BibliographyIndex;

    Biography

    Alison Young is Associate Professor of Criminology at the University of Melbourne, Australia.

    'Young explores law's relationship with the image through a number of specific contexts, ranging through photography, graffiti, performace art, and memorials.' -International Journal for the Semiotics of Law