MONSTERS - What do we do with the art of monstrous men

怪物:在 Metoo運動中重新審視藝術作品

類別 : 社會科學
ISBN:978-0525655114
頁數 : 288
出版 : Knopf, 2023 年 4 月 25 日
版本 : 精裝版
版權窗口 : 繁體博達代理David / 简体版權已售David

內容介紹

偉大藝術作品背後如果隱藏著怪物般的男性藝術家,我們如何能毫無芥蒂地區分作品與創作者?
 

《怪物》是知名作家克萊兒·帝迪勒的最新著作,她對我們在#metoo 時代如何打造和體驗由「怪物」男性藝術家所創造的藝術作品,以及藝術創作天才與怪物之間的連結,進行了熱烈、刺激、極度敏銳的探討辯證。

 

《怪物》這本堅定無畏、深刻個人化的書,源自於帝迪勒 2017 年為《巴黎評論》(Paris Review)撰寫的文章《我們如何面對可怕男人所創造的藝術?》(“What Do We Do With the Art of Monstrous Men?”)寫成,2019年翻譯並收錄在義大利”Racconti di Donne” 選集,這篇文章被《長篇》選為年度最佳論文,在全球風靡一時Metoo運動中多次被引用,是迄今為止關於 Me Too 運動最具影響力和洞察力的文章之一。

 

作者·帝迪勒在本書中問道:作為藝術品的觀眾,在知道創作者私生活的行徑後,我們如何能欣賞海明威(Hemingway)、波蘭斯基(Polanski),、奈波爾(Naipaul)、邁爾斯·戴維斯(Miles Davis)、畢卡索(Picasso)的作品嗎?我們應該喜愛這些藝術天才兼怪物男人的作品嗎?藝術創作的天才應該得到特殊的豁免權待遇嗎?男性怪物和女性怪物是相同的嗎?這些怪物的藝術是否有權描繪心靈的黑暗元素?如果他這位藝術家在深淵中凝視得太久,會發生什麼事?

 

克萊兒·帝迪勒探討了觀眾與藝術家如伍迪艾倫(Woody Alle)到麥可傑克森(Michael Jackson)的關係,她問道:我們如何平衡那不可否認的道德憤怒感與同樣地不可否認的對於作品的熱愛?沿著更令人困擾的問題深入下去,她想知道藝術家是否需要成為怪物才能創造出偉大的傑作。如果一位藝術家也是一位母親,那麼這個身份是否會勢必無情地、致命地中斷另一個身份?本書極具高度話題性、道德智慧,誠實直擊核心,肯定會引發一場熱烈的社會對話,關於我們是否以及如何將藝術家與他們的藝術作品切割開來評斷。

作者介紹

Claire Dederer(克萊兒·帝迪勒) 隨筆作家、書評和記者,她著有兩部備受好評的回憶錄《愛與麻煩》(Love and Trouble)、《姿勢》(Poser: My Life in Twenty-Three Yoga Poses)。《姿勢》是紐約時報暢銷書,已被翻譯成 11 種語言,並選入華納兄弟影業的電視節目,也被改編為舞台劇。她的職涯始於《西雅圖周刊》的首席影評,長期為《紐約時報》撰稿,她的文章也刊登在《巴黎評論》、《大西洋》The Atlantic,、《國家》The Nation、《時尚》、《紐約雜誌》以及許多其他知名刊物上。帝迪勒目前在太平洋大學低駐地寫作藝術碩士課程計畫任教。她曾獲赫奇布魯克和蘭南基金會的寫作駐村計畫。作者網站: http://clairedederer.com/ 。作者臉書: https://twitter.com/clairedederer 

書評

NAMED A MOST ANTICIPATED/BEST BOOK OF SPRING BY: The New York Times (twice!), BuzzFeed, Entertainment Weekly, TIME Magazine, Bustle, i-D, Nylon, Kirkus, The Millions, LitHub, Alta, Chicago Review of Books, The Philadelphia Inquirer

 

“Part memoir, part treatise, and all treat . . . nimble, witty . . . Her exquisitely reasoned vindication of Lolita brought tears to my eyes . . . This is a book that looks boldly down the cliff of roiling waters below and jumps right in, splashes around playfully, isn’t afraid to get wet. How refreshing.” —The New York Times

 

“Excellent . . . A work of deep thought and self-scrutiny that honors the impossibility of the book’s mission. Dederer comes to accept her love for the art that has shaped her by facing the monstrous, its potential in herself, and the ways it can exist alongside beauty and pathos. Go ahead, she tells us, love what you love. It excuses no one.” —The New Yorker

 

“[A] vital, exhilarating book . . . Although Dederer has done her homework, her style is breezy and confessional . . . Monsters leaves us with Dederer’s passionate commitment to the artists whose work most matters to her, and a framework to address these questions about the artists who matter most to us." —The Washington Post

 

“She asks important questions . . .  [and] skirts categorical answers. Subtle and adroit.” —The Atlantic

 

“Dazzling . . . If you too love the work of Polanski—or Picasso, Hemingway, Allen, Davis, and so on—sticking with Dederer on her curlicued journey might be the best gift you can give yourself. The final chapter feels its way toward a conclusion that burns clean, though it hurts a little too.” —TIME

 

“Dederer presents a lively, personal exploration of how one might think about the art of those who do bad things . . . Even when the subject matter tips into the uncomfortable and upsetting, it’s such a pleasure to stretch out in a big, nuanced conversation about a topic that can be so easily flattened into wrong and right, good and bad; it’s a pleasure to be asked to think." —Vanity Fair

 

“The field of criticism claims objective standards that remove the emotional response of the critic from its evaluation. Dederer begins to take apart these claims to objectivity by teasing out the connections between art and its creator and the connections between the critic and their own subjectivity . . . [Dederer] offers instead an embodied form of critique, one that acknowledges that a critic's emotions, physical responses and life experiences come to bear on the ways they judge the work of others.”
—Minneapolis Star Tribune

 

“An extraordinary and ambitious study of the slippery problems of biography when it comes to consuming art . . . It’s a book that’s not afraid to say, 'I don’t know,' written by an author who isn’t afraid of her mind changing as she unpacks everything from Woody Allen’s Manhattan to Vladimir Nobokov’s Lolita to J.K. Rowling, full stop . . . The book’s greatest feat is in its refusal to spit out any absolutes.”—Nylon Magazine

 

“Dederer’s approach radiates humanity—or, in other words, subjectivity . . . Throughout the book, Dederer mines the tension between how she thinks she should feel as a feminist, and how she actually feels as an artist; how she wants to feel as a mother, and how she truly experiences motherhood. She isn’t afraid to get her hands dirty, approaching these issues with rigorous curiosity instead of intellectual authority—and this willingness to challenge her own contradictory thought process is a welcome antidote to the dominant discourse surrounding the work of problematic figures, the societal mandates around which vacillate with the politics of the time." —Document Journal

 

“[Dederer] just keeps getting better and smarter. In Monsters, she ties herself in intellectual and emotional knots, poking holes in her own arguments with gusto. In contrast to so many nonfiction books adapted from articles, Monsters doesn’t stretch a singular thesis over several hundred pages. Quite the contrary, it’s absolutely exhilarating to read the work of someone so willing to crumple up her own argument like a piece of paper, throw it away and start anew. She’s constantly challenging her own assumptions, more than willing to find flaws in her own thinking." —The San Francisco Chronicle

 

“Conversational, clear and bold without being strident . . . Dederer showcases her critical acumen . . . In this age of moral policing, Ms. Dederer’s instincts to approach such material with an open mind—and heart—are laudable.” —The Wall Street Journal

 

“[Monsters is] profoundly cathartic. The book feels simultaneously like having the deepest, artiest conversation with the smartest people you know and like having an intense shit-talking session with your closest friends." —Alta

 

"The book is tangled and fascinating, chasing down arguments and questions that can’t always be easily resolved. Dederer’s shrewd, vivid descriptions of movies and books suggest just how much they mean to her and how deeply any sacrifices on the altar of contemporary sexual ethics might cut." —Slate

 

"The rare polemic that’s full of greedy love for the good stuff in this world, Monsters is an expansion of Dederer’s instant classic Paris Review essay from 2017, 'What Do We Do with the Art of Monstrous Men.' With a larger canvas, she lets both her cast of monsters and our culpability grow, and manages to one-up herself over and over again. Cooly pensive on an overheated subject, Dederer writes powerfully about art’s ability to move us, teach us, and entrap us." —Bustle

 

“A hot and urgent monologue structured around a problem without a solution. Dederer says out loud the things that are flitting through her mind as she prowls around her snarling beasts, prodding and poking, inspecting their fangs . . . immersive and doubtlessly important.” —The Times Literary Supplement  (UK)

 

“Smart, funny, and surprisingly forgiving . . . You can’t read it without thinking of your own literary loves and hates—and wondering how to know the difference.” —4Columns

 

"The masterstroke of Dederer’s book is that she doesn’t seek to duck her ambivalence. She doesn’t try to magic it away by finding an expert or thinking harder, although her book has crystalline intellectual force . . . Denounce Allen or Polanski all she wants, she realizes, their work still calls to her, and from that stubborn fact she has fashioned a book of depth and candor about what it is to be heartbroken by an artist whose work we also happen to love . . . So on point is Monsters: A Fan’s Dilemma about the historical moment in which we currently find ourselves, you want to carry it around with you and whip it out at every bar or dinner party" —Avenue Magazine

 

"In a world that wants you to think less—that wants, in fact, to do your thinking for you, Monsters is that rare work, beyond a book, that reminds you of your sentience. It's wise and bold and full of the kind of gravitas that might even rub off.” — Lisa Taddeo, author of Three Women

 

“An exhilarating, shape-shifting exploration of the perilous boundaries between art and life. This timely book inhabits both the marvelous and the monstrous with generosity and wit.” — Jenny Offill, author of Dept. of Speculation

 

“A blisteringly erudite and entertaining read. Dederer holds the moral ambiguity of her subject matter, landing her arguments with precision and flair. It's a book that deserves to be widely read and will provoke many conversations.” — Nathan Filer, author of The Shock of the Fall

 

“Monsters is an incredible book, the best work of criticism I have read in a very long time. It’s thrillingly sharp, appropriately doubtful, and more fun than you would believe, given the pressing seriousness of the subject matter. Claire Dederer’s mind is a wonder, her erudition too; I now want her to apply them to everything I’m interested in so I can think about them differently.” —Nick Hornby, author of High Fidelity

 

“Slyly funny, emotionally honest, and full of raw passion, Claire Dederer’s important book about what to do when artists you love do things you hate breaks new ground, making a complex cultural conversation feel brand new. Monsters elegantly takes on far more than ‘cancel culture’—it offers new insights into love, ambition, and what it means to be an artist, a citizen, and a human being.” — Ada Calhoun, author of Why We Can't Sleep: Women's New Midlife Crisis

 

“A valuable meditation on some of the era’s most urgent cultural questions . . . Emerging from Dederer’s reflections is the plain truth that every personal response to art is inseparable not only from the artist’s past but also the history of each member of its audience.” —Library Journal

 

“[An] insightful exploration . . . Dederer’s case studies include Roman Polanski, Woody Allen, and Miles Davis, whose work she considers brilliant and important. What’s a fan to do? Dederer offers nuanced answers, challenging the assumption that boycotting is always the best response.” —Booklist

 

“Bringing erudition, emotion, and a down-to-earth style to this pressing problem, Dederer presents her finest work to date . . . Dederer’s analysis includes both usual and unusual suspects, often with remarkably original angles.” —Kirkus Reviews [starred review]

 

“What’s a fan to do when they love the art, but hate the artist? asks book critic and essayist Dederer (Love and Trouble) in this nuanced and incisive inquiry . . . There are no easy answers, but Dederer’s candid appraisal of her own relationship with troubling artists and the lucidity with which she explores what it means to love their work open fresh ways of thinking about problematic artists. Contemplative and willing to tackle the hard questions head on, this pulls no punches." —Publishers Weekly [starred review]

 

"Despite the heavy subject matter, Monsters is neither rant nor sermon. Dederer is not only an incisive researcher and writer, she’s also conversational, approachable and funny. The book seamlessly incorporates bits of memoir—Dederer’s life in the Pacific Northwest, her experiences as a critic and a woman, her failures—that have informed her critical thinking. Yes, Monsters is a worthy addition to contemporary literary criticism, but more than that, it’s a very enjoyable book about a thorny, elusive subject." —BookPage [starred review]

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怪物:在 Metoo運動中重新審視藝術作品

MONSTERS - What do we do with the art of monstrous men

怪物:在 Metoo運動中重新審視藝術作品

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