La distanciation dans l’œuvre régionaliste de Grant Wood comme moyen de mise en échec du nationalisme

Regionalist painter Grant Wood’s works complied with much of the regionalist ideology as defined by critic Thomas Craven with its nationalism and its rejection of European Modernism. Wood displayed his concern for an American idiom in many of his works. However, while they use pictorial elements tha...

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Main Author: Kamila Benayada
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Maison de la Recherche en Sciences Humaines 2009-02-01
Series:Revue LISA
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/lisa/273
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spelling doaj-585bc08977bd4924b415fb4d49e858f02021-10-02T07:46:50ZengMaison de la Recherche en Sciences HumainesRevue LISA1762-61532009-02-01728310.4000/lisa.273La distanciation dans l’œuvre régionaliste de Grant Wood comme moyen de mise en échec du nationalismeKamila BenayadaRegionalist painter Grant Wood’s works complied with much of the regionalist ideology as defined by critic Thomas Craven with its nationalism and its rejection of European Modernism. Wood displayed his concern for an American idiom in many of his works. However, while they use pictorial elements that suggest acceptance of the nationalist rhetoric of both Craven and the New Deal art projects, Wood’s works actually show aesthetic preoccupations similar to those of Modernists, and a growing distance from the mythic representations of America often found in regionalist art. While Wood empathises with his countrymen, he also introduces elements within the narrative, and aesthetic elements, that contradict his acceptance of the dominant discourse. Strange, inappropriate and unexpected incursions question the theme and aesthetic affiliation of a work. This deviation, this escape from the frame imposed by Craven and the New Deal, this estrangement, can work as a questioning of America, its values, its myths and its self-representation.http://journals.openedition.org/lisa/273americannessothernessmulticulturalismdeterritorialized self / languagetranslationregionalism
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kamila Benayada
spellingShingle Kamila Benayada
La distanciation dans l’œuvre régionaliste de Grant Wood comme moyen de mise en échec du nationalisme
Revue LISA
americanness
otherness
multiculturalism
deterritorialized self / language
translation
regionalism
author_facet Kamila Benayada
author_sort Kamila Benayada
title La distanciation dans l’œuvre régionaliste de Grant Wood comme moyen de mise en échec du nationalisme
title_short La distanciation dans l’œuvre régionaliste de Grant Wood comme moyen de mise en échec du nationalisme
title_full La distanciation dans l’œuvre régionaliste de Grant Wood comme moyen de mise en échec du nationalisme
title_fullStr La distanciation dans l’œuvre régionaliste de Grant Wood comme moyen de mise en échec du nationalisme
title_full_unstemmed La distanciation dans l’œuvre régionaliste de Grant Wood comme moyen de mise en échec du nationalisme
title_sort la distanciation dans l’œuvre régionaliste de grant wood comme moyen de mise en échec du nationalisme
publisher Maison de la Recherche en Sciences Humaines
series Revue LISA
issn 1762-6153
publishDate 2009-02-01
description Regionalist painter Grant Wood’s works complied with much of the regionalist ideology as defined by critic Thomas Craven with its nationalism and its rejection of European Modernism. Wood displayed his concern for an American idiom in many of his works. However, while they use pictorial elements that suggest acceptance of the nationalist rhetoric of both Craven and the New Deal art projects, Wood’s works actually show aesthetic preoccupations similar to those of Modernists, and a growing distance from the mythic representations of America often found in regionalist art. While Wood empathises with his countrymen, he also introduces elements within the narrative, and aesthetic elements, that contradict his acceptance of the dominant discourse. Strange, inappropriate and unexpected incursions question the theme and aesthetic affiliation of a work. This deviation, this escape from the frame imposed by Craven and the New Deal, this estrangement, can work as a questioning of America, its values, its myths and its self-representation.
topic americanness
otherness
multiculturalism
deterritorialized self / language
translation
regionalism
url http://journals.openedition.org/lisa/273
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