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David Jones, Disability and Modernist Form: Corporeality, Woundedness Embodiment the 'Makings'
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David Jones, Disability and Modernist Form: Corporeality, Woundedness Embodiment the 'Makings' in Bloomington, MN
Current price: $115.00

David Jones, Disability and Modernist Form: Corporeality, Woundedness Embodiment the 'Makings' in Bloomington, MN
Current price: $115.00
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Size: Hardcover
Employing a fresh theoretical approach to David Jones' work, this is the first book to use disability studies as a lens through which to consider his postwar work.
Unpacking the distinct corporeality in the work of Welsh modernist maker, poet, painter, and engraver, David Jones (18951974) that emerges from the trauma of Jones's participation in the Great War, this book frames the complex modes of embodiment in his postwar work. In doing so, it relates Jones's pioneering visual art and poetic form to antecedents (William Blake) and modern artists (Sarah Lucas and Damien Hirst) while using materiality to form connections between modernism, disability, and the liturgy of the Eucharist upon which Jones centres his work.
Unpacking the distinct corporeality in the work of Welsh modernist maker, poet, painter, and engraver, David Jones (18951974) that emerges from the trauma of Jones's participation in the Great War, this book frames the complex modes of embodiment in his postwar work. In doing so, it relates Jones's pioneering visual art and poetic form to antecedents (William Blake) and modern artists (Sarah Lucas and Damien Hirst) while using materiality to form connections between modernism, disability, and the liturgy of the Eucharist upon which Jones centres his work.
Employing a fresh theoretical approach to David Jones' work, this is the first book to use disability studies as a lens through which to consider his postwar work.
Unpacking the distinct corporeality in the work of Welsh modernist maker, poet, painter, and engraver, David Jones (18951974) that emerges from the trauma of Jones's participation in the Great War, this book frames the complex modes of embodiment in his postwar work. In doing so, it relates Jones's pioneering visual art and poetic form to antecedents (William Blake) and modern artists (Sarah Lucas and Damien Hirst) while using materiality to form connections between modernism, disability, and the liturgy of the Eucharist upon which Jones centres his work.
Unpacking the distinct corporeality in the work of Welsh modernist maker, poet, painter, and engraver, David Jones (18951974) that emerges from the trauma of Jones's participation in the Great War, this book frames the complex modes of embodiment in his postwar work. In doing so, it relates Jones's pioneering visual art and poetic form to antecedents (William Blake) and modern artists (Sarah Lucas and Damien Hirst) while using materiality to form connections between modernism, disability, and the liturgy of the Eucharist upon which Jones centres his work.

















