Walking with the enemy
The art of subversive mimicry in the post-truth era
by Gediminas Gasparavicius, Maia Toteva, Tom Williams
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Endorsements
Walking with the enemy is a book about mimicry and its uses in contemporary art. The artists and cultural activists discussed here adopt the language of authority or ideology, and in doing so, they produce critical reflections, mimetic distortions, or subversive images of the norms governing our culture and politics. The volume brings together writings by seventeen scholars and artists from around the world to present a diverse picture of this underdiscussed cultural strategy. Covering the work of cultural figures as varied as Laibach, the Yes Men, Hank Willis Thomas, Stephen Colbert, and many others, contributors recount the ways these artists have used mimicry to address ideologies of state power, the neoliberal consensus, decolonial activism, the politics of race and gender, online subcultures, the rise of the new right, the post-truth era, and other topics. In this volume, subversive mimicry emerges as an important alternative to traditional critique. When little agreement exists on the boundaries between reality and fantasy or truth and lies, it is becoming increasingly more challenging to establish a robust and effective opposition. This book shows how various artists and activists utilize mimicry as an asymmetrical response to ideological distortions or cultural blind spots.
Reviews
Walking with the enemy is a book about mimicry and its uses in contemporary art. The artists and cultural activists discussed here adopt the language of authority or ideology, and in doing so, they produce critical reflections, mimetic distortions, or subversive images of the norms governing our culture and politics. The volume brings together writings by seventeen scholars and artists from around the world to present a diverse picture of this underdiscussed cultural strategy. Covering the work of cultural figures as varied as Laibach, the Yes Men, Hank Willis Thomas, Stephen Colbert, and many others, contributors recount the ways these artists have used mimicry to address ideologies of state power, the neoliberal consensus, decolonial activism, the politics of race and gender, online subcultures, the rise of the new right, the post-truth era, and other topics. In this volume, subversive mimicry emerges as an important alternative to traditional critique. When little agreement exists on the boundaries between reality and fantasy or truth and lies, it is becoming increasingly more challenging to establish a robust and effective opposition. This book shows how various artists and activists utilize mimicry as an asymmetrical response to ideological distortions or cultural blind spots.
Author Biography
Gediminas Gasparavicius is Associate Professor at The University of Akron Maia Toteva is Associate Professor of Global Art and Visual Culture at Texas Tech University Tom Williams is Assistant Professor of Art History at Belmont University
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 August 2026
- Orginal LanguageEnglish
- ISBN/Identifier 9781526169488 / 1526169487
- Publication Country or regionUnited Kingdom
- FormatPrint PDF
- Pages448
- ReadershipGeneral/trade; College/higher education; Professional and scholarly
- Publish StatusPublished
- Dimensions234 X 156 mm
- Biblio NotesDerived from Proprietary 5816
- SeriesRethinking Art's Histories
- Reference Code15310
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