
×
Uh-oh, it looks like your Internet Explorer is out of date.
For a better shopping experience, please upgrade now.

The Exile of George Grosz: Modernism, America, and the One World Order
272
by Barbara McCloskeyBarbara McCloskey
65.0
In Stock
Overview
The Exile of George Grosz examines the life and work of George Grosz after he fled Nazi Germany in 1933 and sought to re-establish his artistic career under changed circumstances in New York. It situates Grosz’s American production specifically within the cultural politics of German exile in the United States during World War II and the Cold War. Basing her study on extensive archival research and using theories of exile, migrancy, and cosmopolitanism, McCloskey explores how Grosz’s art illuminates the changing cultural politics of exile. She also foregrounds the terms on which German exile helped to define both the limits and possibilities of American visions of a one world order under U.S. leadership that emerged during this period. This book presents Grosz’s work in relation to that of other prominent figures of the German emigration, including Thomas Mann and Bertolt Brecht, as the exile community agonized over its measure of responsibility for the Nazi atrocity German culture had become and debated what Germany’s postwar future should be. Important too at this time were Grosz’s interactions with the American art world. His historical allegories, self-portraits, and other works are analyzed as confrontational responses to the New York art world’s consolidating consensus around Surrealism and Abstract Expressionism during and after World War II. This nuanced study recounts the controversial repatriation of Grosz’s work, and the exile culture of which it was a part, to a German nation perilously divided between East and West in the Cold War.
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9780520281943 |
---|---|
Publisher: | University of California Press |
Publication date: | 01/31/2015 |
Edition description: | First Edition |
Pages: | 272 |
Sales rank: | 319,830 |
Product dimensions: | 8.20(w) x 10.20(h) x 0.80(d) |
About the Author
Barbara McCloskey is Department Chair and Associate Professor of Modern German Art at the University of Pittsburgh. She has published widely on the relationship between art and politics in German twentieth-century art, the visual culture of World War II, and artistic mediations of the experience of exile in the modern and contemporary eras. Her previous books include Artists of World War II and George Grosz and the Communist Party: Art and Radicalism in Crisis, 1918 to 1936.
Table of Contents
List of Abbreviations Acknowledgments Preface: Beyond Exile Introduction: Exile and the American Century 1. Making an Exile Culture 2. Exile and the One World Order 3. Exile in the Age of Anxiety 4. The Exile Returns Conclusion: Tears of the Clown Notes Selected Bibliography List of Illustrations IndexCustomer Reviews
Related Searches
Explore More Items
Portrait of America describes our nation’s changing population and examines through a demographic lens some ...
Portrait of America describes our nation’s changing population and examines through a demographic lens some
of our most pressing contemporary challenges, ranging from poverty and economic inequality to racial tensions and health disparities. Celebrated authorJohn Iceland covers various topics, including ...
Reaching from interior Alaska across Canada to Labrador and Newfoundland, North America’s boreal forest is ...
Reaching from interior Alaska across Canada to Labrador and Newfoundland, North America’s boreal forest is
the largest wilderness area left on the planet. It is critical habitat for billions of birds; more than 300 species regularly breed there. After the ...
What is it like to become an adult in twenty-first-century America? This book takes us ...
What is it like to become an adult in twenty-first-century America? This book takes us
to four very different placesNew York City, San Diego, rural Iowa, and Saint Paul, Minnesotato explore the dramatic shifts in coming-of-age experiences across the country. ...
Pink ribbons, red dresses, and greenwashingAmerican corporations are scrambling to tug at consumer heartstrings through ...
Pink ribbons, red dresses, and greenwashingAmerican corporations are scrambling to tug at consumer heartstrings through
cause-related marketing, corporate social responsibility, and ethical branding, tactics that can increase sales by as much as 74%. Harmless? Marketing insider Mara Einstein demonstrates in ...
Dematerialization examines the intertwined experimental practices and critical discourses of art and industrial design in ...
Dematerialization examines the intertwined experimental practices and critical discourses of art and industrial design in
Argentina, Mexico, and Chile in the 1960s and 1970s. Provocative in nature, this book investigates the way that artists, critics, and designers considered the relationship ...
Flags and Faces, based on David Lubin’s 2008 Franklin D. Murphy Lectures at the University ...
Flags and Faces, based on David Lubin’s 2008 Franklin D. Murphy Lectures at the University
of Kansas, shows how American artists, photographers, and graphic designers helped shape public perceptions about World War I. In the book’s first section, “Art for ...
After World War I, artists without formal training “crashed the gates” of major museums in ...
After World War I, artists without formal training “crashed the gates” of major museums in
the United States, diversifying the art world across lines of race, ethnicity, class, ability, and gender. At the center of this fundamental reevaluation of who ...
Generation Priced Out is a call to action on one of the most talked-about issues ...
Generation Priced Out is a call to action on one of the most talked-about issues
of our time: how skyrocketing rents and home values are pricing the working and middle classes out of urban America. Randy Shaw tells the powerful ...