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Philosophical anthropology --- Anthropomorphism --- Symbolism --- God --- Corporeality
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Civilization --- Philosophical anthropology --- Lifestyles --- Civilisation --- Anthropologie philosophique --- Style de vie --- Philosophy --- Philosophie --- Anthropologie --- Philosophie de la culture --- Philosophie occidentale --- Philosophical anthropology. --- Anthropomorphism. --- Ethics, Modern --- Philosophy. --- Monde (philosophie)
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Many contemporary artworks evoke the human figure: consider the omnipresence of the mannequin in current installations of artists like John Miller, Thomas Hirschhorn, Heimo Zobernig, or David Lieske. Or consider the revival of a minimalist vocabulary, which embraces anthropomorphism as in the works of Isa Genzken and Rachel Harrison. This book brings together contributions from the eponymous conference, all of which seek to speculate on the reasons as to why, since the turn of the millennium, we have encountered so many artworks that tend to reconcile Minimalism with suggestions of the human figure. It proposes that this new artistic convention becomes rather questionable when discussed in the light of Franco Berardi's theory of semiocapitalism-a power technology that aims squarely at our human resources. The participants of this conference were asked to offer possible explanations for this wide acceptance of anthropomorphism could it be that this is a manifestation of the increasingly desperate desire for art to have agency?
kunsttheorie --- iconografie --- kunst en politiek --- kunst en economie --- iconologie --- antropomorfisme --- kunst --- semiokapitalisme --- eenentwintigste eeuw --- lichamelijkheid --- 7.041 --- 7.039 --- 7.01 --- Anthropomorphism in art --- Anthropomorphism in art. --- Art and anthropology --- Art and anthropology. --- Art and society --- Art and society. --- Art --- Human figure in art --- Human figure in art. --- Minimal art --- Minimal art. --- Historiography --- Historiography. --- 2000-2099. --- Art, Minimal --- Minimalism (Art) --- Minimalist art --- Systematic painting --- Art, Abstract --- Art, Modern --- Art, Occidental --- Art, Visual --- Art, Western (Western countries) --- Arts, Fine --- Arts, Visual --- Fine arts --- Iconography --- Occidental art --- Visual arts --- Western art (Western countries) --- Arts --- Aesthetics --- Art and sociology --- Society and art --- Sociology and art --- Anthropology and art --- Anthropology --- Human body in art --- Composition (Art) --- Figurative art --- Anatomy, Artistic --- Figure drawing --- Figure painting --- Social aspects --- Art, Primitive
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In 1925, while transcribing and painting in his Red Book, C. G. Jung presented a series of seminars in English in which he spoke for the first time in public about his early spiritualistic experiences, his encounter with Freud, the genesis of his psychology, and the self-experimentation he called his "confrontation with the unconscious," describing in detail a number of pivotal dreams and fantasies. He then presented an introductory overview of his ideas about psychological typology and the archetypes of the collective unconscious, illustrated with case material and discussions concerning contemporary art. He focused particularly on the contra-sexual elements of the personality, the anima and the animus, which he discussed with the participants through psychological analyses of popular novels, such as Rider Haggard's She. The notes from these seminars form the only reliable published autobiographical account by Jung and the clearest and most important account of the development of his work. This revised edition features additional annotations, information from the Red Book, and an introduction by Sonu Shamdasani, Philemon Professor of Jung History at University College London.
Jungian psychology. --- Abstraction. --- Active imagination. --- Ambivalence. --- Analogy. --- Analytical psychology. --- Anecdote. --- Anthropomorphism. --- Apotheosis. --- Archetype. --- Arthur Schopenhauer. --- Barbara Hannah. --- Bollingen Foundation. --- Cambridge University Press. --- Career. --- Carl Jung. --- Carl Spitteler. --- Censer. --- Collective unconscious. --- Consciousness. --- Criticism. --- Deity. --- Dementia praecox. --- Diagram. --- Disease. --- Dream interpretation. --- Edition (book). --- Emma Jung. --- Enantiodromia. --- Eranos. --- Explanation. --- Extraversion and introversion. --- Feeling. --- Formality. --- Good and evil. --- Humiliation. --- Hypnosis. --- Illustration. --- Imagination. --- Impasse. --- Individuation. --- Inferiority complex. --- Jaime de Angulo. --- Lecture. --- Libido. --- Literature. --- Marcel Duchamp. --- Meeting. --- Mithraism. --- My Child. --- Neurosis. --- Nominalism. --- Of Education. --- Participant. --- Personality. --- Phenomenon. --- Philosopher. --- Philosophy of the Unconscious. --- Philosophy. --- Prejudice. --- Princeton University Press. --- Principle. --- Printing. --- Psychiatrist. --- Psychiatry. --- Psychoanalysis. --- Psychological Types. --- Psychologist. --- Psychology of the Unconscious. --- Psychology. --- Psychophysics. --- Publication. --- Reality. --- Religion. --- Religious experience. --- Richard Wilhelm (sinologist). --- Sabina Spielrein. --- Sake. --- Self-experimentation. --- Seminar. --- Sentimentality. --- Sigmund Freud. --- Simon Magus. --- Skepticism. --- Sonu Shamdasani. --- Spirituality. --- Stupidity. --- Suggestion. --- Symbole. --- Symptom. --- The Black Magician (novel series). --- The Erotic. --- The Other Hand. --- Theory. --- Thought. --- Toni Wolff. --- Transcript (education). --- Transference. --- Unconsciousness. --- Wise old man. --- Writing.
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