Harry Berger, Jr., is Professor Emeritus of Literature and Art History at the University of California, Santa Cruz. He is the author, most recently, of Making Trifles of Terrors: Redistributing Complicities in Shakespeare (Stanford, 1997).
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Description
Introduction; Part I. Early Modern Technologies and Politics of Representation and Their Consequences: 1. Technologies: the system of early modern painting; 2. Politics: the apparatus of commissioned portraiture; 3. Consequences: Sprezzatura and the Anxiety of self-representation; Part II. Facing the Gaze: 4. The face as index of the mind: art historians and the physiognomic fallacy; 5. Physiognomy, mimetic idealism, and social change; 6. Elias on physiognomic skepticism: Homo Clausus and the anxiety of representation; 7. Lacan on the narcissism of orthopsychic desire; 8. Fictions of the pose (1): the fiction of objectivity; 9. Fictions of the pose (2): representing orthopsychic desire; Part III. The Embarrassment of Poses: On Dutch Portraiture: 10. Local matters; 11. The posography of embarrassment: representational strategies in a decentralized class society; 13. Rembrandt's embarrassment: an anatomy of group portraiture; Part IV. Rembrandt's Looking-Glass Theater: 14. Methodological interlude II: on self-portraits; 15. Good boys and bad: orthopsychic comedy in the early self-portraits; 16. Marking time: revisionary allusion in specular fictions; 17. Rembrandt as Burgher: waiting for Maerten Soolmans; 18. Methodological interlude III: texture versus facture; 19. Specular fictions in two etchings; 20. Married with Peacock: Saskia in Rembrandt's looking-glass theater; 21. Methodological interlude IV: on revisionary allusion - Rembrandt against the Italian Renaissance; 22. Rembrandt as courtier; 23. Rembrandt in chains: the Medici self-portrait; 24. Rembrandt in Venice: the patriarch; 25. (Ef)facing the hand; 26. The last laugh: or, something more.
"Specialists in the field should be interested in Berger's re-interpretation of particular portraits by Rembrandt and other artists... More general readers can benefit from these summaries..." - Canadian Journal of History "Berger comes to art history from outside of art history, like fresh air through an open window." - Common Knowledge