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Book party on Thursday, Dec. 14, at Labyrinth, fetes new book by Keith Moxey

The Practice of Persuasion coverNEW YORK, N.Y. - The community has been invited to help celebrate the publication of a new book by Keith Moxey, Ann Whitney Olin Professor of Art History, titled The Practice of Persuasion: Paradox as Power in Art History.

Labyrinth Books, at 536 West 112th Street, will host the book party at 7 p.m., Thursday, Dec. 14. The public is invited.

The book, published in hardcover and paperback by Cornell University Press this month, is a sequel to Moxey's 1994 work, The Practice of Theory: Poststructuralism, Cultural Politics, and Art History. The book stresses the need for continued self-reflexive awareness in art historical writing.

According to the publisher, "Offering a series of meditations on the discipline of art history in the context of contemporary critical theory, Moxey addresses such central issues as the status of the canon, the nature of aesthetic value, the character of historical knowledge, and the identity of the authorial voice. The chapters are linked by a common interest in, even fascination with, the paradoxical power of narrative."

In Moxey's view, art history is a "rhetorical of persuasion rather than a discourse of truth," and he adds that "art history as a discipline is often unable to recognize its status as a regime of truth that produces historically determined meanings and so continues to act as if based on a universal aesthetic foundation."

According to David Carrier, of the University of Pittsburgh, the book "Anyone wanting to see why art history is intellectually exciting right now could hardly do better than to read this extremely lucid, mercifully brief and very important book."

Moxey is also the author of Peasants, Warriors, and Wives: Popular Imagery in the Reformation, and co-editor of several anthologies of art historical writings.

Contact: Office of Public Affairs, 212-854-2037

 

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