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Endorsements
This wonderful book made me rethink loneliness. Kath Woodward, Emeritus Professor, Open University Drawing on a rich and diverse range of artistic, creative, everyday, and contemporary interactions, the book wrestles with over-easy definitions, just as it challenges the uneven conditions of late capitalism. To understand the intellectual reach of a creative ethnography read this book, but to explore the complexity of our lonely hearts and their generative potential, you need to sit with it awhile, take on the book's rhythm, and then set aside space for hope. Helen Wood, Professor of Media and Cultural Studies, University of Lancaster Sean Redmond has here crafted a moving and innovative ethnography that gives shape and form to an ideology of loneliness that illustrates its broader connections to therapy culture, neoliberal capitalism, and the liquid speed of modernity. Brenda R. Weber, Provost Professor and Jean C. Robinson Scholar, Indiana University, Bloomington The loneliness room uniquely draws upon the art of ordinary people to explore and explain how and why they experience loneliness today. Refusing to hold to a single definition of loneliness, the book instead uses the metaphor of the loneliness room to enable people to submit artistic responses that are personal and political, and which often refute and resist the pathology that is attached to feeling lonely in the world. The loneliness room examines the art and media forms that so often are charged with representing loneliness, taking in photography, paintings, film, documentary, music and sound, and poetry and literature. The book powerfully shows how these representations create discourses in and around loneliness that lay its cause at the doors of individuals rather than the political and economic structures of neo-liberal capitalism. The book advances the tools and methods of audio-visual ethnography, showing how creative practice affords new opportunities for data gathering. As a book, it transforms not only the way we understand loneliness, but the practices we employ to better understand it.
Reviews
This wonderful book made me rethink loneliness. Kath Woodward, Emeritus Professor, Open University Drawing on a rich and diverse range of artistic, creative, everyday, and contemporary interactions, the book wrestles with over-easy definitions, just as it challenges the uneven conditions of late capitalism. To understand the intellectual reach of a creative ethnography read this book, but to explore the complexity of our lonely hearts and their generative potential, you need to sit with it awhile, take on the book's rhythm, and then set aside space for hope. Helen Wood, Professor of Media and Cultural Studies, University of Lancaster Sean Redmond has here crafted a moving and innovative ethnography that gives shape and form to an ideology of loneliness that illustrates its broader connections to therapy culture, neoliberal capitalism, and the liquid speed of modernity. Brenda R. Weber, Provost Professor and Jean C. Robinson Scholar, Indiana University, Bloomington The loneliness room uniquely draws upon the art of ordinary people to explore and explain how and why they experience loneliness today. Refusing to hold to a single definition of loneliness, the book instead uses the metaphor of the loneliness room to enable people to submit artistic responses that are personal and political, and which often refute and resist the pathology that is attached to feeling lonely in the world. The loneliness room examines the art and media forms that so often are charged with representing loneliness, taking in photography, paintings, film, documentary, music and sound, and poetry and literature. The book powerfully shows how these representations create discourses in and around loneliness that lay its cause at the doors of individuals rather than the political and economic structures of neo-liberal capitalism. The book advances the tools and methods of audio-visual ethnography, showing how creative practice affords new opportunities for data gathering. As a book, it transforms not only the way we understand loneliness, but the practices we employ to better understand it.
Author Biography
Sean Redmond is Professor of Film and Television at Deakin University, Australia.
Manchester University Press
Manchester University Press is a leading UK publisher known for excellent research in the humanities and social sciences.
View all titlesBibliographic Information
- Publisher Manchester University Press
- Publication Date March 2024
- Orginal LanguageEnglish
- ISBN/Identifier 9781526161444 / 1526161443
- Publication Country or regionUnited Kingdom
- FormatPrint PDF
- Pages280
- ReadershipGeneral/trade; College/higher education; Professional and scholarly
- Publish StatusPublished
- Dimensions234 X 156 mm
- Biblio NotesDerived from Proprietary 5493
- SeriesAnthropology, Creative Practice and Ethnography
- Reference Code14200
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