In this article I explore the feminism of contemporary women’s film, video and installation art through an analysis of the documentary evidential and the imagined in works by Emma Hart, Hala Elkoussy and Sarah Turner. These works are not about feminist issues as such, but each figures a woman, or women, in ways that, I argue, engage questions of sexual difference. I draw on Jacques Rancière’s characterisation of politics to understand feminism as a politics of sexual difference, but also an ethics in relation to living, that is, as being and doing as a woman. At the same time feminism is an aesthetic project in relation to the understanding of, and intervening in, the representation of woman and her imagining, her difference, so what is inv...
Rosi Braidotti’s description of the ‘transdisciplinary’ action of feminism, delineated above with pa...
Summarising the relationship of feminism and photography presents a significant challenge since the ...
What does it mean, for a feminist, or a woman, to be a subject? And how can we, as objects that we n...
‘Feminisms’ (as a plural) is widely used today to draw attention to inequalities and to critique the...
Feminist art is an artistic political movement that arised as an expression of feminism. It shows an...
What is feminist art? Can an ordinary viewer experience it in a neutral, detached, and objective way...
This PhD research explores the question: what can be a founding premise now for art practice as femi...
This article explores feminist art criticism from the point of view of aesthetics/politics in global...
Authoritative publication focusing on the role of theory in the evolution of feminist art. Phelan's ...
What is the significance of gendered identification in relation to artists' moving image? How do wom...
My thesis is centered on poetics of the body in contemporary feminist art. Poetics, understood as th...
Being a feminist is no longer embarrassing or outmoded (most of the time). What it means, to be a fe...
Can there be a feminist aesthetic?” analyzes the difficulty of finding an ontological position from ...
© 2017 Dr. Caroline PhillipsThis practice-led research upholds a view of sexual difference as a muta...
Feminist artworks can be a resource in our attempt to understand individual identities as neither si...
Rosi Braidotti’s description of the ‘transdisciplinary’ action of feminism, delineated above with pa...
Summarising the relationship of feminism and photography presents a significant challenge since the ...
What does it mean, for a feminist, or a woman, to be a subject? And how can we, as objects that we n...
‘Feminisms’ (as a plural) is widely used today to draw attention to inequalities and to critique the...
Feminist art is an artistic political movement that arised as an expression of feminism. It shows an...
What is feminist art? Can an ordinary viewer experience it in a neutral, detached, and objective way...
This PhD research explores the question: what can be a founding premise now for art practice as femi...
This article explores feminist art criticism from the point of view of aesthetics/politics in global...
Authoritative publication focusing on the role of theory in the evolution of feminist art. Phelan's ...
What is the significance of gendered identification in relation to artists' moving image? How do wom...
My thesis is centered on poetics of the body in contemporary feminist art. Poetics, understood as th...
Being a feminist is no longer embarrassing or outmoded (most of the time). What it means, to be a fe...
Can there be a feminist aesthetic?” analyzes the difficulty of finding an ontological position from ...
© 2017 Dr. Caroline PhillipsThis practice-led research upholds a view of sexual difference as a muta...
Feminist artworks can be a resource in our attempt to understand individual identities as neither si...
Rosi Braidotti’s description of the ‘transdisciplinary’ action of feminism, delineated above with pa...
Summarising the relationship of feminism and photography presents a significant challenge since the ...
What does it mean, for a feminist, or a woman, to be a subject? And how can we, as objects that we n...