Direkt zum Inhalt

Warenkorb

  • Matt Ratto, Megan Boler (Eds.)

    DIY Citizenship. Critical Making and Social Media

  • Gilles Rouffineau (Ed.)

    Passing On History. Design Contribution To Knowledge…

  • Zeuler R. M. de A. Lima

    Lina Bo Bardi

  • Jacques Sbriglio

    Le Corbusier et la question du brutalisme. LC au J1

  • Kaja Grobe, Karin Kreuder

    Always the Same Faces. Aus dem Alltag philippinischer…

  • Christoph Tannert (Hg.)

    Berlin Art Scene

  • Clog

    Miami

  • Andreas van Dühren (Hg.)

    TEXT Gespräche

  • Dario Azzellini, Marina Sitrin

    They Can't Represent Us! Reinventing Democracy from…

  • James Langdon

    A School for Design Fiction

  • Valentin Groebner

    Wissenschaftssprache digital. Die Zukunft von gestern

  • Deyan Sudjic

    B is for Bauhaus. An A-Z of the Modern World

  • Andy Merrifield

    The New Urban Question

  • Hans Ulrich Obrist

    Ways of Curating

  • Stine Omar, Max Boss, Andy Grier

    SMAREAZY 001 12"EASTER, Champagne 121212 / Children…

  • Anke Westermann

    Anke Westermann. Atlas

  • Nina Möntmann (Ed.)

    Schöne Neue Arbeit / Brave New Work. Ein Reader zu Harun…

  • Christiane E. Fricke (Hg.)

    Der Gang der Dinge. Welche Zukunft haben photographische…

  • Emil Ruder

    Fundamentals

  • Graham Cairns

    The Architecture of the Screen

  • Andrej Holm

    Mietenwahnsinn

  • René Pollesch

    Kill Your Darlings

  • Giorgio Maffei

    Records By Artists. 1958-1990

  • Beatrix Ruf, Julia Stoschek, Thomas D.…

    Ed Atkins

  • Helmut Lethen

    Der Schatten des Fotografen

  • Marta Kuzma (Ed.)

    Big Sign - Little Building

  • Martin Herbert

    The Uncertainty Principle

  • Andrej Holm (Hg.)

    Reclaim Berlin. Soziale Kämpfe in der neoliberalen Stadt

  • Cathy Lane, Angus Carlyle

    In the Field. The Art of Field Recording

  • Diedrich Diederichsen

    Über Pop-Musik

  • Helmut Draxler, Tanja Widmann (Hg.)

    Ein kritischer Modus? Die Form der Theorie und der Inhalt…

  • Helmut C. Schulitz

    Entfesselung der Architektur. Der Architekt: Baumeister…

  • James Haywood Rolling Jr.

    Arts-Based Research

  • Elisabeth Roudinesco

    Lacan. In Spite Of Everything

  • Claudia Quiring, Andreas Rothaus,…

    Neue Baukunst. Architektur der Moderne in Bild und Buch

  • Justus Dahinden

    Architektur - Form und Emotion. Architecture - Form and…

  • Judith Butler, Athena Athanasiou

    Die Macht der Enteigneten. Das Performative im Politischen

  • Matt Mullican

    Editions 1985-2012

  • Daan Paans

    Letters from Utopia

  • Marcus Quent, Eckardt Lindner (Hg.)

    Das Versprechen der Kunst

  • Kerry Brougher

    Damage Control. Art and Destruction Since 1950

  • Armen Avanessian (Hg.)

    Realismus Jetzt: Spekulative Philosophie und Metaphysik für…

  • Marc Angelil, Rainer Hehl (Eds.)

    Minha Casa-nossa Cidade. Innovating Mass Housing In Brazil

  • Olafur Eliasson

    Eine Feier, elf Räume und ein gelber Korridor

  • Archivist

    Three Faces. Archive Chalayan

  • Alistair Hicks

    The Global Art Compass

  • Manfred Omahna, Johanna Rolshoven (Hg.)

    Reziproke Räume. Texte zu Kulturanthropologie und…

  • Jan Verwoert

    COOKIE!

  • Martin Conrads, Franziska Morlok (Ed.)

    War postdigital besser?

  • Stephen Phillips (Ed.)

    L.A. [Ten]. Interviews on Los Angeles Architecture, 1970–…

  • Andrew Hemingway

    The Mysticism of Money

  • Ljiljana Kolešnik (Ed.)

    Socialism and Modernity. Art, Culture, Politics 1950 – 1974

  • Sascha Peters

    Materialrevolution 2. Neue nachhaltige und multifunktionale…

  • Francesca Ferguson, Urban Drift…

    Make Shift City. Renegotiating the Urban Commons

  • CTM 2014 Festival Magazine

    Dis Continuity

  • UDK, ETH (Ed.)

    Mapping Everything

  • Ryan Gander

    Artists’ Cocktails

  • Tecta

    Flying Furniture

  • Warren Carter, Barnaby Haran, Frederic…

    ReNew Marxist Art History

  • Birkenstock, Kastner, Sonderegger (Eds.)

    Kunst und Ideologiekritik nach 1989 / Art and the Critique…

  • Yilmaz Dziewior (Ed.)

    Liebe ist kälter als das Kapital. Love is colder than…

  • Anna Kostreva

    Berlin. Eine Morphologie der Mauern. A Morphology of Walls

  • Emmett Williams

    An Anthology of Concrete Poetry

  • Michaela Melián / Thomas Meinecke

    IEMANJÁ

  • Junya Ishigami

    How Small? How Vast? How architecture grows

  • Pieterjan Grandry

    The Future of Architecture. What is the future of…

  • Beatriz Colomina

    Manifesto Architecture. The Ghost of Mies

  • Jens Müller (Ed.)

    Rolf Müller

  • Gill Perry

    Playing at Home. The House in Contemporary Art

  • Jennifer A.E. Shields

    Collage and Architecture

  • Gaßner, Kölle, Roettig (Ed.)

    Eva Hesse. One More Than One

  • Andreas Baur, Bernd Stiegler, Felix…

    Wozu Bilder? Gebrauchsweisen der Fotografie

  • Kim Gordon

    Is It My Body? Selected Texts

  • René Spitz

    A5/06. HfG Ulm

  • Petra Reichensperger (Ed.)

    Begriffe des Ausstellens (von A bis Z). Terms of Exhibiting…

  • Torsten Blume, Christian Hiller (Hg.)

    Mensch - Raum – Maschine. Bühnenexperimente am Bauhaus

  • Clémentine Deliss, Yvette Mutumba (Hg.)

    Ware und Wissen: or the stories you wouldn’t tell a stranger

  • Richard Birkett (Ed.)

    and Materials and Money and Crisis

  • Barbara Penner

    Bathroom (Objekt series)

  • Otto Paans, Ralf Pasel

    Situational Urbanism. Directing Postwar Urbanity

  • Tactical Technology Collective

    Visualising Information for Advocacy

  • Emma Lavigne

    Pierre Huyghe

  • Alessandro Petti, Sandi Hilal, Eyal…

    Architecture after Revolution

  • Phil Pasquini

    Domes, Arches and Minarets. A History of Islamic-Inspired…

  • Tracey Thorn

    Bedsit Disco Queen. How I Grew Up and Tried to be a Pop Star

  • Tim Ivison, Tom Vandeputte (Hg)

    Contestations. Learning from Critical Experiments in…

  • IDEA Magazine

    IDEA 362. Poetics of Graphic Language. Contemporary…

  • Hans Ulrich Obrist

    Sharp Tongues, Loose Lips, Open Eyes, Ears to the Ground

  • Jeannette Kuo (Ed.)

    A-Typical Plan

  • Taiji Matsue

    Tyo-WTC

  • Anna Feigenbaum, Fabian Frenzel,…

    Protest Camps

  • Christopher Burke, Eric Kindel, Sue…

    Isotype. Design and Contexts, 1925–1971

  • Mark Dorrian, Frederic Pousin (Eds.)

    Seeing from Above. The Aerial View in Visual Culture

  • Gianni Politi

    The Ritual of the Snake

  • Frank Kunert

    Wunderland

  • Andrew Hemingway

    The Mysticism of Money. Precisionist Painting and Machine…

  • Karl-Siegbert Rehberg, Paul Kaiser (Hg.)

    Bilderstreit und Gesellschaftsumbruch. Die Debatte um die…

  • Neil Brenner (Ed.)

    Implosions / Explosions. Towards a Study of Planetary…

The Queer Art of Failure

The Queer Art of Failure is about finding alternativesoto conventional understandings of success in a heteronormative, capitalist society; to academic disciplines that confirm what is already known according to approved methods of knowing; and to cultural criticism that has extensively theorized hegemony but paid little attention to counter-hegemony. Judith Halberstam proposes "low theory" as a means of recovering ways of being and forms of knowledge not legitimized by existing systems and institutions. Low theory is derived from eccentric archives. It runs the risk of not being taken seriously. It entails a willingness to fail and to lose one's way. Tacking back and forth between high theory and low theory, high culture and low culture, Halberstam looks for the unexpected and subversive in popular culture, avant-garde performance, and queer art. She pays particular attention to animated children's films, contending that new forms of animation, especially CGI, have generated narratives filled with unexpected encounters between the childish, the transformative, and the queer. Dismantling contemporary logics of success, Halberstam demonstrates that failure sometimes offers more creative, cooperative, and surprising ways of being in the world.
"...insightful and intellectually brave in places, and makes a significant intervention in the development of queer theory. The Queer Art of Failure is also utterly charming... For all the humour in its content and in its style, this is a very serious work." Robert Eaglestone, Times Higher Education "A lively and thought-provoking examination of how the homogenizing tendencies of modern society might be resisted through the creative application of failure, forgetting, and passivity, actions generally deemed of little value within today's capitalist models of success... A valiant attempt to find value in positions and attitudes such as negativity that our modern success-oriented society disdains, this study is never less than thrilling." Publishers Weekly "The Queer Art of Failure is a manifesto for cultural studies. It self-consciously risks being dismissed or trashed in order to rescue alternative objects of analysis, methods of knowing, and ways of communicating. Its stakes are clear. It's not attempting to argue for the recovery of its materials from obscurity; it values forgetting and obsolescence. It's not claiming to retool our understanding of major work; it traffics unapologetically in the minor. And it doesn't pretend to comprehensive scholarship; it offers up plot summaries and allegorical readings with glee." Elizabeth Freeman, author of Time Binds: Queer Temporalities, Queer Histories "The Queer Art of Failure is inspired, provocative, and hilarious. More significantly, it is a deft evisceration of the regulative rigidities of disciplinarity and the pretensions of 'high theory.' Judith Halberstam's advocacy of 'silly archives' and 'low theory' is much more than a carnivalesque skewering of the earnest self-seriousness of much academic scholarship; it is a populist clarion call for expansive democratic visions of what it is we are writing about and for whom we think we are writing." Lisa Duggan, author of The Twilight of Equality? Neoliberalism, Cultural Politics, and the Attack on Democracy "Failure abounds all around us: economies collapse, nation-states falter, and malfeasance rules. In the face of our dismal situation Judith Halberstam distils and repurposes the negative for the purpose of thinking outside the tyranny of success. The Queer Art of Failure finds a new vitality in not winning, accumulating, doing or knowing. Both counter intuitive and anti-anticipatable, this compelling book pushes beyond many of the impasses and blockages that limit our critical horizons today." Jose Esteban Munoz, author of Cruising Utopia: The Here and Now of Queer Futurity "All losers are the heirs of those who have lost before them.' The Queer Art of Failure narrates hilarious and swerving outlaw comedies of refusal, absurdity, and exuberant being, acting in solidarity with its resident artists--from SpongeBob SquarePants to Yoko Ono. But the book hums a dark tone, too. The arts of normative style, playing out on sexual, racialized, gendered, and colonial bodies and landscapes, are painful to witness, even here. No artist or critic can repair the damage, erasing history; but Judith Halberstam wields all of the weapons that intelligence (and cartoons) can bring against the harsh work of conventionality." Lauren Berlant, author of Cruel Optimism "Queer Theory using Spongebob Squarepants? Totally there... Underdogs and shoddy queers can take wordy, erudite solace in Halberstam's words." GT "...here is a book well worth the time and attention it takes to read it and to consider its implications. Most especially in that Judith Halberstam writes not only with authority, but also with genuine wit, which leaves the reader laughing out loud from time to time, something quite unknown until now in books of queer theory. Further, Ms. Halberstam presents her case with deep insight into human nature, and into our deepset cultural need to simplify our definition of the word success--and, up until now, our seeming need to ignore the creative implications of failure. " Vinton Rafe McCabe New York Journal of Books "Set against a backdrop of global fincial crisis this is a quirky explanation of the queer possibilities the concept of failure has to offer, opening with a quote from SpongeBob SquarePants." Diva


Judith Halberstam
The Queer Art of Failure
Duke, 2011, 9780822350453