TY - BOOK AU - Ferrari,Federico AU - Nancy,Jean-Luc AU - O'Byrne,Anne E. TI - Being nude: the skin of images SN - 9780823256204 (hardback) AV - N7572 .F47213 2014 U1 - 704.9/421 23 PY - 2014/// CY - New York PB - Fordham University Press KW - Nude in art KW - Nudity KW - Psychological aspects KW - Aesthetics KW - ART / General KW - bisacsh KW - PHILOSOPHY / Aesthetics KW - PHILOSOPHY / Movements / Deconstruction N1 - Includes bibliographical references; Machine generated contents note: -- Nus sommes -- Preamble -- Acéphale -- Bathsheba -- Caress -- Disfiguration -- Equivocal -- Fenestration -- Goya -- Humus -- Incarnate -- Joker -- Khaos -- Lumbar -- Model -- Nimbus -- Optic -- Presence -- Quotidian -- Resurrection -- Scopophilia -- Trans -- Use -- Veritas -- We -- X -- Y -- Zero N2 - "What does it mean to be nude? What does the nude do? In a series of constantly surprising reflections, Jean-Luc Nancy and Federico Ferrari encounter the nude as an opportunity for thinking in a way that is stripped bare of all received meanings and preconceived forms. In the course of engagements with twenty-six separate images, the authors show how the nudes produced by painters and photographers expose this bareness of thought and leave us naked on the verge of a sense that is always nascent, always fleeting, on the surface of the skin, on the surface of the image. While the nude is a symbol of truth in philosophy and art alike, what the nude definitively and uniquely reveals is unclear. In Being Nude: The Skin of Images, the authors argue that the nude is always presented as both vulnerable in its exposure and shy of conceptualization, giving a sense of the ultimate ineffability of the meaning of being. Although the nude represents the revealed nature of truth, nude figures hold a part of themselves back, keeping in reserve the reality of their history, parts of their present selves, and also their future possibilities for change, development, and demise. Skin is itself a type of clothing, and stripping away exterior layers of fabric does not necessarily lead to grasping the truth. In this way, the difference between being clothed and being nude is diminished. The images that inspire the authors to contemplate the nudity of being show many ways in which one can and cannot be nude, and many ways of being in relation to oneself and to others, clothed and unclothed"--; "26 reflections on nude images from the history of Western art including Rembrandt, Goya, David Hockney and Nan Golden. The authors, both philosophers, develop an approach to the nude that involves shedding preconceived concepts and exposing ourselves to the fleeting sense that passes over the surface of the nude's skin and over the surface of the image"-- ER -