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  • Sabine Hansmann, Finn Geipel (Hg.)

    Raummaschine: Exploring the Manifold Spaces

  • Peter Donhauser

    Musikmaschinen: Die Geschichte der Elektromusik

  • Amanda Boetzkes

    Plastic Capitalism. Contemporary Art and the Drive to Waste

  • Stefanie Graefe

    Resilienz im Krisenkapitalismus: Wider das Lob der…

  • Daniel Johnston

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  • Daniel Birnbaum, Sven-Olov Wallenstein

    Spacing Philosophy: Lyotard and the Idea of the Exhibition

  • Roland Meyer

    Operative Porträts. Eine Bildgeschichte der…

  • A. Juppien, R. Zemp

    Vokabular des Zwischenraums: Gestaltungsmöglichkeiten von…

  • Paul O'Neill, Simon Sheikh, Lucy…

    Curating after the Global: Roadmaps for the Present

  • Maya Vinitsky (Ed.)

    Solar Guerrilla: Constructive Responses to Climate Change

  • Annette Jael Lehmann

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    Bobst Graphic. 1972 - 1981

  • H. Bodenschatz, D. Brantz

    Grünfrage und Stadtentwicklung. 100 Jahre Groß-Berlin

  • Christoph Cox

    Sonic Flux: Sound, Art, and Metaphysics

  • Rosi Braidotti, Simone Bignall (eds.)

    Posthuman Ecologies. Complexity and Process after Deleuze

  • T. Garcia, V. Normand (Hg)

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  • David Byrne

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  • James Bridle

    New Dark Age: Der Sieg der Technologie und das Ende der…

  • Sabine Breitwieser (Ed.)

    E.A.T. - Experiments in Arts and Technology

  • Richard Buckminster Fuller

    R. Buckminster Fuller. Nine Chains to the Moon. An…

  • Ulrike Bernard

    Wuan Wandeln

  • Jenelle Porter

    Less Is a Bore: Maximalist Art & Design

  • Agata Toromanoff

    Impossible Design: Außergewöhnliche Designobjekte der…

  • C. Leonard, L. Khonsary (Hg)

    The Halifax Conference. Oct. 5&6 1970

  • Birgit Rieger, Claudia Wahjudi

    Berlin Interviews. 16 Künstlerinnen und Künstler über eine…

  • Paolo Cirio

    Evidentiary Realism. Investigative, Forensic, Documentary…

  • Robert Kronenburg

    This Must Be The Place: An Architectural History of Popular…

  • Oliver Marchart

    Conflictual Aesthetics: Artistic Activism and the Public…

  • Jürgen Hasse, Sara F. Levin

    Betäubte Orte: Erkundungen im Verdeckten

  • Alexandra Klei

    Wie das Bauhaus nach Tel Aviv kam: Re-Konstruktion einer…

  • Sarah Banet-Weiser

    Empowered. Popular Feminism and Popular Misogyny

  • Stephen Prina

    As He Remembered It

  • Christoforos Savva

    Untimely, Again

  • Barbagallo, Beuret, Harvie (Hg.)

    Commoning with George Caffentzis and Silvia Federici

  • A Prior #20

    The Research Issue

  • Bernard Stiegler

    The Age of Disruption: Technology and Madness in…

  • Edgar Cabanas, Eva Illouz

    Manufacturing Happy Citizens: How the Science and Industry…

  • C. Profanter, H. Andersen, J. Eckhardt…

    The Middle Matter. Sound as Interstice

  • I. Galuzin, G. Severianova (Eds.)

    The Withdrawal of the Red Army

  • IDEA #381

    Transboundary Design. Perspective of Yoshihisa Tanaka

  • Andres Lepik, Daniel Talesnik (Hg)

    Access for All. São Paulo's Architectural…

  • Isabelle Graw, Christoph Menke (eds.)

    The Value of Critique: Exploring the Interrelations of…

  • Bernhard Denkinger

    Die vergessenen Alternativen. Strukturalismus und…

  • P. Bogner, G. Zillner

    Frederick Kiesler: Face to Face with the Avant-Garde:…

  • Jonathan Hill

    The Architecture of Ruins: Designs on the Past, Present and…

  • L. Giusti, N. Ricciardi (Eds.)

    Museums at the Post-Digital Turn

  • IDEA Magazine

    IDEA 386. Ministry of Graphic Design Fikra Graphic Design…

  • Gregor H. Lersch, Léontine Meijer-van…

    Mischa Kuball. res.o.nant

  • Marco Revelli

    The New Populism: Democracy Stares into the Abyss

  • Jacques Ranciere

    Aisthesis: Scenes from the Aesthetic Regime of Art

  • Gean Moreno

    In the Mind but Not from There. Real Abstraction and…

  • Saskia de Wit

    Hidden Landscapes. The metropolitan garden as a multi-…

  • Tchoban Foundation

    Deutsche Filmarchitektur 1918–1933 – German Film…

  • Natascha Süder Happelmann

    Ankersentrum (surviving in the ruinous ruin)

  • HeK (House of Elecronics Basel)

    Entangled Realities: Living with Artificial Intelligence /…

  • Alain Ehrenberg

    Die Mechanik der Leidenschaften: Gehirn, Verhalten,…

  • Rosi Braidotti

    Posthuman Knowledge

  • Klaus-Martin Bresgott

    Neue Sakrale Räume: 100 Kirchen der Klassischen Moderne

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    We Are Many. Art, the Political and Multiple Truths

  • Fitz, Krasny, Architekturzentrum Wien (…

    Critical Care. Architecture and Urbanism for a Broken Planet

  • Anne Kockelkorn, Nina Zschocke (Hg)

    Productive Universals. Specific Situations: Clinical…

  • Elke Neumann

    Palast der Republik. Utopie, Inspiration, Politikum

  • A+U 441

    Metal Skins

  • Troy Schaum (Ed.)

    Totalization: Speculative Practice in Architectural…

  • F. Serapiao, G. Wisnik

    Infinite Span. 90 Years of Brazilian Architecture

  • Heike Munder (Ed.)

    Producing Futures: A Book on Post-Cyber-Feminisms

  • L. Giusti, N. Ricciardi (Eds.)

    Museums at the Post-Digital Turn

  • Victor Papanek

    Design for the Real World

  • Andreas, Jung, Schmal (Hg.)

    Wohnen für Alle: Bautenkatalog

  • Elizabeth Resnick

    The Social Design Reader

  • Anca Benera, Arnold Estefan

    DEBRISPHERE - Landscape as an Extension of the Military…

  • Fiona McGovern, Megan Francis Sullivan…

    Jill Johnston. The Disintegration of a Critic

  • Byung-Chul Han

    Vom Verschwinden der Rituale: Eine Topologie der Gegenwart

  • Camiel van Winkel

    Archive Species: Bodies, Habits, Practices

  • Ted Hyunhak Yoon

    Decoding Dictatorial Statues

  • Sophie Cure, Aurelien Farina

    Graphic Design Play Book: An Exploration of Visual Thinking

  • Danielle Child

    Working Aesthetics: Labour, Art and Capitalism

  • Katya Garcia-Anton

    Sovereign Words. Indigenous Art, Curation and Criticism

  • Monika Rinck

    Champagner für die Pferde

  • Lorraine Daston

    Against Nature

  • Brigitta Gerber, Ulrich Kriese (Hg)

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    Tiny Interiors: Compact Living Spaces

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    Seeing Science: How Photography Reveals the Universe

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    XYZT

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    Comradeship: Curating, Art, and Politics in Post-Socialist…

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    Color for Architects

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    Junya Ishigami

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    Sad by Design: On Platform Nihilism

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    Klare, lichte Zukunft: Eine radikale Verteidigung des…

  • M. F. Gage (Ed.)

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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