The object stares back : on the nature of seeing / James Elkins.
Series: Harvest bookPublisher: San Diego : Harcourt, Inc., 1997Edition: First Harvest editionDescription: 271 pages : illustrations ; 21 cmContent type:- text
- still image
- unmediated
- volume
- 9780156004978
- 9780684800950
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
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CGLAS Library | Blue | 701 ELK (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 04038 | |
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CGLAS Library | Blue | 701 ELK (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 07610 | |
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CGLAS Library | Blue | 701 ELK (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 10355 |
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Includes bibliographical references (pages 243-251) and index.
"Just looking" -- The object stares back -- Looking away, and seeing too much -- Seeing bodies -- What is a face? -- Blindness -- Envoi.
At first it appears that nothing could be easier than seeing. We just focus our eyes and take in whatever is before us. This ability seems detached, efficient, and rational - as if the eyes are competent machines telling us everything about the world without distorting it in any way. But those ideas are just illusions, Elkins argues, and he suggests that seeing is undependable, inconsistent, and caught up in the threads of the unconscious. Blindness is not the opposite of vision, but its constant companion, and even the foundation of seeing itself. Elkins asks about objects that are too violent, too sexually charged, or too beautiful to look at directly. When we see a naked body, we either stare lasciviously or look away in embarrassment: in those moments our eyes are not ours to command. Bodies, Elkins says, are among the fundamental things that the eye seeks in every scene: when we are presented with something new, we first try to find a body, or the echoes of a body, and if we fail, our seeing becomes restless and nomadic. The same is true of things that are dead or inert. The world is full of objects that catch our eye, and that seem to have eyes of their own. The sun is an eye, perhaps the most powerful of all. It sees us as much as we see it, and when we stare at it, the sun stares back. Using drawings, paintings, diagrams, and photographs to illustrate his points, Elkins raises intriguing questions and offers astonishing perceptions about the nature of vision. Ultimately, he concludes, "Seeing alters the thing that is seen and transforms the seer".