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Dead Matter: The Meaning of Iconic Corpses
Barnes and Noble
Dead Matter: The Meaning of Iconic Corpses
Current price: $28.00
Barnes and Noble
Dead Matter: The Meaning of Iconic Corpses
Current price: $28.00
Size: Paperback
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To begin interpreting the corpse as a representational object referring to the deceased, Margaret Schwartz examines the association between photography and embalmingboth as aesthetics and as mourning practices. She introduces the concept of photographic indexicality, using it as a metric for comprehending the relationship between the body of a dead leader (including Abraham Lincoln, Vladimir Lenin, and Eva Perón) and the “body politic” for which it stands. She considers bodies known as victims of atrocity like Emmett Till and the Syrian boy Hamsa al-Khateeb to better grasp the ways in which the corpse as object may be called on to signify a marginalized body politic, at the expense of the social identity of the deceased. And she contemplates “tabloid bodies” such as Princess Diana’s and Michael Jackson’s, asserting that these corpses must remain invisible in order to maintain the deceased as a source of textual and value production.
Ultimately concluding that the evolving cultural understanding of photographic realism structures our relationship to the corpse,
outlines the new politics of representation, in which death is exiled in favor of the late capitalist reality of bare life.