Imaging and Mapping Eastern Europe puts images centre stage and argues for the agency of the visual in the construction of Europe’s east as a socio-political and cultural entity. This book probes into the discontinuous processes of mapping the eastern European space and imaging the eastern European body. Beginning from the Renaissance maps of Sarmatia Europea, it moves onto the images of women in ethnic dress on the pages of travellers’ reports from the Balkans, to cartoons of children bullied by dictators in the satirical press, to Cold War cartography, and it ends with photos of protesting crowds on contemporary dust jackets.
Studying the eastern European ‘iconosphere’ leads to the engagement with issues central for image studies and visual culture: word and image relationship, overlaps between the codes of othering and self-fashioning, as well as interaction between the diverse modes of production specific to cartography, travel illustrations, caricature, and book cover design.
This book will be of interest to scholars in art history, visual culture, and central Asian, Russian and Eastern European studies.
Table of Contents
1. Welcome to Slaka; 2. Mapping Eastern Europe; 3. The Lure of the Ethnic Dress: Eastern Europe in the Traveller’s Gaze; 4. Mr Punch Draws Eastern Europe; 5. The Battle of the Dust Jackets; 6. Farewell to Slaka
Author(s)
Biography
Katarzyna Murawska-Muthesius teaches in the Department of History of Art at Birkbeck College, University of London. She was Deputy Director of the National Museum in Warsaw.