ABSTRACT

This book seeks to understand culture through the lens of scenes, analyzing them aesthetically and culturally as well as understanding them through the frameworks of gender, social networks, and artworlds.

It is common to talk about the cultural and intellectual scenes of early twentieth-century Vienna, the visual art scene of postwar New York, and the music and fashion scene of the swinging London. We often think about artists and works of art as essentially belonging to a certain scene. Scenes might offer a new approach to study what is possible, what is a tradition, and/or to discuss what are the relevant units of contemporary culture for research. The book posits that scenes explain a lot about how the artworld and the cultural field function. Vivienne Westwood, Rene Magritte, Roman Jakobson, Arthur C. Danto, Susan Sontag, James Baldwin, and Didier Eribon are among the figures included in the book, which examines scenes in cities such as Moscow, Bombay, New York, London, Paris, Brussels, Helsinki, and Bratislava.

The book will be of interest to scholars working in art history, cultural studies, philosophy, film, literature, and urban studies.

chapter 1|17 pages

Three Giants

Vivienne Westwood, Roman Jakobson, and René Magritte, and Their Vertical and Horizontal Travels Through Scenes

chapter 2|21 pages

Sketching Out the Structure of the Scenes

chapter 4|7 pages

If Beale Street Could Talk Like Greenwich Village

Scenes, Class, Ethnicity, and Some Notes on Contemporary Urban Studies through Scenes

chapter 5|16 pages

Aesthetics of the Scenes

chapter 6|8 pages

Film Scenes

Professionals, Institutionally Homeless Filmmakers, and Film Enthusiasts