Cambridge: Polity. 2014. 112 p. ISBN10: 0745679579; ISBN13: 978-0745679570.
In this important new book the leading philosopher Jacques Rancière continues his reflections on the representative power of works of art. How does art render events that have spanned an era? What roles does it assign to those who enacted them or those who were the victims of such events? Rancière considers these questions in relation to the works of Claude Lanzmann, Goya, Manet, Kandinsky and Barnett Newman, among others, and demonstrates that these issues are not only confined to the spectator but have greater ramifications for the history of art itself. For Rancière, every image, in what it shows and what it hides, says something about what it is permissible to show and what must be hidden in any given place and time. Indeed the image, in its act of showing and hiding, can reopen debates that the official historical record had supposedly determined once and for all. He argues that representing the past can imprison history, but it can also liberate its true meaning.
Note on the text
The unforgettableIn front of the camera lens
Behind the window
The threshold of the visible
In the face of disappearance
Senses and figures of historyOf four senses of history
History and representation: three poetics of modernity
On three forms of history painting
Films cited