meta name=isbn13 content" />

 
Book Search:  

 

 
Google full text of our books:

bookjacket

The Glory of van Gogh:
An Anthropology of Admiration
Nathalie Heinich
Translated by Paul Leduc Browne

Paper | 1997 | This edition is out of print | ISBN: 9780691021225
232 pp. | 6 x 9 | 3 tables
Cloth | 1996 | This edition is out of print | ISBN: 9780691032696
224 pp. | 6 x 9 | 3 tables

Reviews | Table of Contents

Google full text of this book:
 

The image of the great artist as a suffering visionary is a recent invention, observes sociologist Nathalie Heinich--an invention rooted in the "canonization" of Vincent van Gogh as a cultural hero for the twentieth century. Heinich explores how and why the impoverished and mentally tormented van Gogh came to be glorified shortly after his suicide at the age of 37. Did the secular art world need a rebel-saint of its own? In considering this possibility, the author explores the history of efforts to celebrate van Gogh, whether in biographies or on T-shirts, showing how the details of his life have been constructed according to the pattern of a Christian saint's rise to recognition. These biographical details circulated first as anecdotes, then as historical truths, and finally became legendary motifs defining individual greatness.

At the time of van Gogh's death, early modernists hailed the work of this self-taught painter as that of a reforming prophet. Public interest stirred when the unique and tragic aspects of the artist's personal life came to light. In these stories, the figure of Van Gogh oscillated between godlike asceticism (he lived on very little, did not get married, did not eat much, and devoted his life to his work) and demonic frenzy (he drank, he went to brothels, and offered a piece of his own flesh, his severed ear, to a prostitute). His legend became one of victim and sacrificer, of an accursed artist who gave the world great paintings but paid the heavy price of society's ignorance.

Heinich organizes her book around the stages that characterize the life of a saint-deviation, renewal, reconciliation, and pilgrimage, the latter culminating in visits to van Gogh's burial site and the competition to buy his paintings or "relics." Heinich explores the economics of the art market and the themes that make up the van Gogh myth, such as the personalization of artistic grandeur, the celebration of the interiority of the creator, and the glorification of abnormality. By examining the mythology that helps drive artistic investment, she forces us to reconsider the nature of admiration and particularly the notion that obscurity during an artist's lifetime is a guarantee of true genius.

Review:

"A deeply learned and provocative analysis. . . . A complex and theoretically ambitious book."--Robin Wagner-Pacifici, Contemporary Sociology

Endorsements:

"A beautiful, original, and very provocative book-a model of creative research. Nathalie Heinich makes a very significant contribution to the sociological analysis of artistic value and to the sociology of culture more generally. She propose[s] a critique of genius theory that will strongly shape the way we think about cultural genius."--Michele Lamont, Princeton University

"A beautiful, original, and provocative book--a model of creative research. Nathalie Heinich makes a very significant contribution to the sociological analysis of artistic value and to the sociology of culture more generally. [She] propose[s] a critique of genius theory that will strongly shape the way we think about cultural genius."--Michèle Lamont, Princeton University

"With an argument that is both imaginative and forceful, [this book] shows not only how we make our heroes but also why we need them."--Priscilla Parkhurst Ferguson, Columbia University.

Table of Contents

Subject Areas:

Hardcover published in 1996

Prices subject to change without notice

File created: 11/7/2011

Questions and comments to: webmaster@press.princeton.edu
Princeton University Press

New Book E-mails
New In Print
Princeton Shorts
PUP Blog
Princeton APPS
Videos/Audios
Sample Chapters
Subjects
Series
Catalogs
eBooks
Online Ordering
For Reviewers
Class Use
Rights
Permissions
Recent Awards
Freshman Reading
About Us
Contact Us
European Office
Links
F.A.Q.
PUP Home


Bookmark and Share
Send me emails
about new books in:
Art and Architecture
European History
American History
More Choices
Email:
Country:
Name: