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Collecting objects/excluding people : Chinese subjects and American visual culture, 1830-1900 / Lenore Metrick-Chen.

LIBRA N7340 .M47 2012
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Metrick-Chen, Lenore
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Art, Chinese--Collectors and collecting--United States.
Art, Chinese.
Art museums--Social aspects--United States.
Art museums.
Art and race.
History.
Art museums--Social aspects.
Art, Chinese--Collectors and collecting.
China--Foreign public opinion, American--History--19th century.
China.
China--Foreign public opinion, American--History--20th century.
United States.
Physical Description:
xvi, 278 pages, 32 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (chiefly color) ; 24 cm
Other Title:
Chinese subjects and American visual culture, 1830-1900
Place of Publication:
Albany [N.Y.] : State University of New York Press, [2012]
Summary:
In Collecting objects/Excluding People, Lenore Metrick-Chen demonstrates an unknown impact of Chinese immigration upon nineteenth-century American art and visual culture. The American ideas of "Chineseness" ranged from a negative portrayal to an admiring one and these varied images had an effect on museum art collections and advertising images. They brought new ideas into American art theory, anticipating twentieth-century Modernism. Metrick-Chen shows that efforts to construct a cultural democracy led to the creation of unforeseen new categories for visual objects and unanticipated social changes. Collecting Object/Excluding People reveals the power of images upon culture, the influence of media representation upon the lives of Chinese immigrants, and the impact of political ideology upon the definition of art itself. Book jacket.
Contents:
Chapter 1 The Politics of Chinoiserie: The Disappearance of Chinese Objects 13
Section I The Early Nineteenth Century 15
1 The Presence of Chinese Objects in the United States 15
2 Opium, Politics, and American Perceptions of the Chinese 19
3 The Chinese in the United States 24
4 Americans Assess China's Artistic Ability 27
5 The Influence of the Chinese Aesthetic on American Art 35
Section II The Late Nineteenth Century 37
1 Regarding "Oriental": Whose Aesthetic Is It? 37
2 American Confusion of Japanese and Chinese Objects 46
3 Politicized Perceptions of the Chinese 55
4 Politics Become Aesthetic Criteria 63
Chapter 2 The Power of Inaction: Chinese Objects and the Transformation of the American Definition of Art 73
Section I Chinese Objects and the Aesthetics of Museums 75
1 Aesthetic Morality and Nationalism, America's Ruskin-Based Art 75
2 The Educational Premise: Inaugurating Two American Art Museums 80
3 Expanding the Canon of Art; Plaster Casts as an Art Form 87
Section II Chinese Objects and the Business of Museums 93
1 Art Museums Founders and the Issue of the Public 93
2 Museums, Art, and Commodities 101
3 Merchandising Art 104
4 The Change of Paradigm 110
Chapter 3 From Class to Race: The New York Times Reconstructs "Chinese" 121
Section I A Brief Historical Contextualization 121
1 Introduction 121
2 Newspaper History and The New York Times 125
3 A Glance at History of Labor, Politicians, and Anti-Chinese Agitation 127
Section II Creating a "Them": The Strategies of Demonization 128
1 Part Becomes the Whole: Turning Chinese into Coolies 128
2 Hordes 131
3 Heathen 134
4 Barbarity and Contamination 136
5 Sex and Drugs 138
6 Ignorance 142
7 Effeminizing the Chinese Man 144
8 Chinese into Coolies into Demonized Race 146
Section III Defining the "Us": The Exclusion Debate: Four Voices Struggle Over Imaging Chinese 150
1 The Exclusion Debate: Four Voices Struggle Over Imaging Chinese 150
2 The Opposing Race Arguments from the Congressional Debates 151
3 The Times Doublespeak: Blame California, Profess Fatigue 158
4 The Chinese View through Word and Action 163
Chapter 4 The Chinese of the American Imagination: Nineteenth-Century Trade Card Images 169
Section II The Politics of Chromolithography 179
1 Power Struggles Over Definitions of Art 179
2 Between Two Worlds: The Dual Role of Trade Cards 183
3 An Addition to Visual Language: Floating Signifiers 184
Section III The Chinese Figure as Outsider 194
1 Dislodged Objects as a New Art 194
2 Paper Nations 195
3 The Safety of Exotic Distance 199
Section IV The Chinese Figure and American Self-Definition 204
1 American, Un-American 204
2 Disjunctions, and Collisions: The Iconography of Displacement 207
3 Hybridity, Cultural Margins, and Incorporation 215.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:
9781438443256
1438443250
OCLC:
752472531

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