Counter-realism: Art and subjectivity in contemporary capitalism
Counter-Realism: Art and subjectivity in contemporary capitalism is an ambitious and original study of key works of film and video art made since 2008 by leading contemporary artists, including William Kentridge, Amalia Ulman, Melanie Gilligan, Lizzie Fitch/Ryan Trecartin and Elizabeth Price. It argues their work should be understood as a reconfigured form of ‘realism’, expressing economic forces and political pressures across contexts ranging from post-apartheid South Africa, through austerity-era Spain, to contemporary Britain and North America. Supported by original artist interviews and detailed visual analysis of individual works of art, as well as a wide-ranging research base, which synthesises arguments from a variety of disciplines including art history, literary, film and political studies, the book is clearly written, and makes legible the ways in which some of the most vivid and compelling works of contemporary moving-image art engage with historical and contemporary political debates.
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Counter-realism: Art and subjectivity in contemporary capitalism
Counter-Realism: Art and subjectivity in contemporary capitalism is an ambitious and original study of key works of film and video art made since 2008 by leading contemporary artists, including William Kentridge, Amalia Ulman, Melanie Gilligan, Lizzie Fitch/Ryan Trecartin and Elizabeth Price. It argues their work should be understood as a reconfigured form of ‘realism’, expressing economic forces and political pressures across contexts ranging from post-apartheid South Africa, through austerity-era Spain, to contemporary Britain and North America. Supported by original artist interviews and detailed visual analysis of individual works of art, as well as a wide-ranging research base, which synthesises arguments from a variety of disciplines including art history, literary, film and political studies, the book is clearly written, and makes legible the ways in which some of the most vivid and compelling works of contemporary moving-image art engage with historical and contemporary political debates.
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Counter-realism: Art and subjectivity in contemporary capitalism

Counter-realism: Art and subjectivity in contemporary capitalism

by Tamara Trodd
Counter-realism: Art and subjectivity in contemporary capitalism

Counter-realism: Art and subjectivity in contemporary capitalism

by Tamara Trodd

Hardcover

$130.00 
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Overview

Counter-Realism: Art and subjectivity in contemporary capitalism is an ambitious and original study of key works of film and video art made since 2008 by leading contemporary artists, including William Kentridge, Amalia Ulman, Melanie Gilligan, Lizzie Fitch/Ryan Trecartin and Elizabeth Price. It argues their work should be understood as a reconfigured form of ‘realism’, expressing economic forces and political pressures across contexts ranging from post-apartheid South Africa, through austerity-era Spain, to contemporary Britain and North America. Supported by original artist interviews and detailed visual analysis of individual works of art, as well as a wide-ranging research base, which synthesises arguments from a variety of disciplines including art history, literary, film and political studies, the book is clearly written, and makes legible the ways in which some of the most vivid and compelling works of contemporary moving-image art engage with historical and contemporary political debates.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781526190215
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Publication date: 12/16/2025
Series: Rethinking Art's Histories
Pages: 280
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x (d)

About the Author

Tamara Trodd is Senior Lecturer in History of Art at the University of Edinburgh

Table of Contents

Introduction: Counter-realism and historical returns

1 William Kentridge, Henry Moore and the subject of mining

2 Amalia Ulman, Simone Weil and the subject of force

3 Bertolt Brecht and the transformation of the subject in the works of Melanie Gilligan and Ryan Trecartin

4 Elizabeth Price, Alain Resnais and the absence of the subject

Conclusion: Making the subject of contemporary art visible

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