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Damien Hirst and the legacy of the sublime in contemporary art and culture

Research Questions: • How can we understand the legacies of the eighteenth-century sublime in contemporary culture – including commercialised and commodified forms? • What are the insistent reiterations of tropes, affects and themes of the sublime doing in contemporary art and culture? • How are the aesthetic forms of the sublime bound in to economic, social and political histories? • What happens when we read Hirst in terms of the histories of the sublime? And the sublime through Hirst? • The work also more generally sets out to examine the cultural forms of our own global-capitalist moment, and to think this within the longer histories of capital. Research Context • Hirst is a highly successful artist but there is a dearth of serious critical writing about him. Most extant work on the yBas was produced in the 90s, as part of a critical polemic around the work. My own work starts from the historical distance which is now opening up between then and now to read Hirst as srt history. • The work also positions itself with regard to a currently burgeoning body of literature around the sublime. I draw on the different approaches of aesthetics, criticism and cultural history to read the relation between past and present forms of the sublime. • My work focuses on the intertwinement of the sublime (from its earliest histories) with commodified culture, rather than just high culture. Research Methods • Hirst is treated as a cultural symptom. • The work investigates forms of historical repetition (Nachträglichkeit, Nachleben, figurality, hauntology, etc.) • Hirst is a focal point for a wider exploration of a wide-ranging cultural history. Other objects of inquiry include: Alexander Pope and the Scriblerians, Bertolt Brecht, John Singleton Copley, James Thomson, Bruegel the Elder, Piranesi, Wordsworth, Steven Spielberg, Mary Shelley and Emile Zola. • My approach is broadly Marxian, but I also critically interrogate Marx, and draw on other approaches including those of Freud, Lyotard, Derrida and Braudel. • Particular attention is given to the early eighteenth century. Findings: • The strength of Hirst's best work stems from its condensation of social contradiction into complex, haunting images – images which are in turn haunted by the histories of sublimity, an aesthetic formed in, and which also serves to help form, capital's imaginary. Hirst and the sublime are bound in to a representational logic of an imperialism common to our own moment and that of early modernity. Such links to the imperialist imaginary belie the use of the sublime by contemporary leftist theorists (such as Lyotard) to valorize the sublime.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bl.uk/oai:ethos.bl.uk:528668
Date January 2009
CreatorsWhite, Luke
PublisherMiddlesex University
Source SetsEthos UK
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeElectronic Thesis or Dissertation
Sourcehttp://eprints.mdx.ac.uk/4282/

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