Uncanny Creatures

Regular price €65.99
Title
Artist with Doll
Avant-garde
Bellmer's dolls
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Category=NHD
die Frau in Blau
die Puppe
Dolls
Dolls for the Vitrine
E.T.A. Hoffmann
eq_art-fashion-photography
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eq_history
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Expressionism
German Romanticism
Hans Bellmer
Hermine Moos
Kokoschka's Alma doll
Les jeux de la poupee
Lotte Pritzel
Oskar Kokochka
Pritzel's wax dolls
Puppen
Puppen fur die Vitrine
Surrealism
The Games of the Doll
The Woman in Blue

Product details

  • ISBN 9780472133291
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 18 Jul 2024
  • Publisher: The University of Michigan Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Germany held a monopoly on the manufacture and export of bisque toy dolls in Europe before WWI. Yet, dolls’ omnipresence in the material, visual, and literary culture of the modern German-speaking world has so far not been properly addressed. In demonstrating this cultural affinity for dolls, Christophe Koné draws upon a range of stories and seminal essays on dolls, as well as toys, sculptures, paintings, and photographs. He examines how E.T.A. Hoffmann’s romantic tale The Sandman (1815) has been a major source of inspiration for German-speaking doll makers because of how it centers imagination and inventiveness. Using Hoffmann’s tale as an early example of an amalgam between doll thinking and making in German culture, Koné shows how it initiated a genealogy of doll thinkers (Freud & Jentsch), writers (Rilke), painters (Kokoschka), photographers (Bellmer), and makers (Pritzel).

Uncanny Creatures then explores how this unusual interest in human-like figures continues a long tradition of thought devoted to conceptualizing “things,” from Immanuel Kant’s theory of the thing-in-itself to Martin Heidegger’s lecture on the thing, and Eduard Mörike or Rainer Maria Rilke’s thing-poems. Because dolls occupy a liminal space—not quite things and more than mere objects—they appear as uncanny creatures which have held a fascination for writers, thinkers, and artists alike. Uncanny Creatures moves past the Freudian discourse of fetishism to propose a new reading of doll artifacts in German culture centered on their ability to evoke a feeling of uncertainty and unsettlement in the viewer.

Christophe Koné is Associate Professor of German at Williams College and Director of the Oakley Center for Humanities and Social Sciences.