Table of Contents
Editorial Note
Art, affect, and art effects
Andrew B. Kipnis, Mariane C. Ferme, Luiz Costa, Raminder Kaur
|
895–900
|
Special Section: The political work of negative affects: A view from post-reform china
Lisa Richaud
|
901–914
|
Barclay Bram
|
915–927
|
Amir Hampel
|
928–941
|
Gil Hizi
|
942–957
|
Zhiying Ma
|
958–971
|
Jie Yang
|
972–985
|
Chun-Yi Sum
|
986–999
|
Kailing Xie
|
1000–1015
|
Xiao He
|
1016–1028
|
Maria Nolan
|
1029–1044
|
Cho-kiu Li
|
1045–1059
|
Special Section: Anthro-artists: Anthropologists as makers and creatives
Anthro-artists: Anthropologists as makers and creatives
Mariane C. Ferme
|
1060–1064
|
Danny Hoffman
|
1065–1069
|
Susan Marie Ossman
|
1070–1084
|
Carol Hendrickson
|
1085–1100
|
Lydia Nakashima Degarrod
|
1101–1115
|
Camilo Leon-Quijano
|
1116–1135
|
Maja Jerrentrup
|
1136–1152
|
Articles
Ming Xue
|
1153–1167
|
Leslie F. Zubieta
|
1168–1190
|
Pedro Pitarch
|
1191–1205
|
Doug Dalton
|
1206–1222
|
Book Symposium
But is it art?
Philippe Erikson
|
1223–1226
|
Frequency, modulation, and time in Amerindian art
Paolo Fortis
|
1227–1230
|
Action and seduction
Pedro Pitarch
|
1231–1234
|
A global rethinking of the attribution of agency to images
Caroline van Eck
|
1235–1237
|
Objects and images: A medievalist’s response to Carlos Fausto’s Art effects
Caroline Walker Bynum
|
1238–1243
|
The ruses of Amerindian art: A reply
Carlos Fausto
|
1244–1253
|