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Main Author: Gorjian, Mahshid
Format: Recurso digital
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Published: Zenodo 2025
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15843995
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author Gorjian, Mahshid
author_facet Gorjian, Mahshid
contents <p>This article explores the radical aesthetics and political critiques embedded in Berlin Dada through an in-depth analysis of Hannah Höch’s Cut with the Kitchen Knife and George Grosz’s Winter’s Tale. It situates both works within the sociopolitical upheaval of Weimar Germany, examining how fragmentation, satire, and photomontage became tools for visual resistance against nationalism, militarism, capitalism, and patriarchal norms. Höch’s photomontages interrogate gender roles and media representations, reclaiming space for the Neue Frau and critiquing ethnographic and colonial imagery. Grosz’s grotesque caricatures expose the moral decay of the bourgeoisie and the dystopian implications of modern urban life under capitalist and authoritarian systems. Drawing on feminist art historiography, theories of mechanization, and critiques of modern identity, the study reframes Berlin Dada as not merely anti-art but as a deeply engaged political practice. By reassessing the contributions of both artists, especially Höch’s marginalized feminist legacy, this research contributes to contemporary debates on art, resistance, and the rewriting of modernist histories.</p>
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spellingShingle Dada, Politics, and Gender: Hannah Höch's Cut with the Kitchen Knife and George Grosz's Winter's Tale
Gorjian, Mahshid
Femenism
Modernism
Gender studies
Visual culture
Femenist art history
Political art
Berlin dada
Avant grade
Photomontage
<p>This article explores the radical aesthetics and political critiques embedded in Berlin Dada through an in-depth analysis of Hannah Höch’s Cut with the Kitchen Knife and George Grosz’s Winter’s Tale. It situates both works within the sociopolitical upheaval of Weimar Germany, examining how fragmentation, satire, and photomontage became tools for visual resistance against nationalism, militarism, capitalism, and patriarchal norms. Höch’s photomontages interrogate gender roles and media representations, reclaiming space for the Neue Frau and critiquing ethnographic and colonial imagery. Grosz’s grotesque caricatures expose the moral decay of the bourgeoisie and the dystopian implications of modern urban life under capitalist and authoritarian systems. Drawing on feminist art historiography, theories of mechanization, and critiques of modern identity, the study reframes Berlin Dada as not merely anti-art but as a deeply engaged political practice. By reassessing the contributions of both artists, especially Höch’s marginalized feminist legacy, this research contributes to contemporary debates on art, resistance, and the rewriting of modernist histories.</p>
title Dada, Politics, and Gender: Hannah Höch's Cut with the Kitchen Knife and George Grosz's Winter's Tale
topic Femenism
Modernism
Gender studies
Visual culture
Femenist art history
Political art
Berlin dada
Avant grade
Photomontage
url https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15843995