by Aviva Briefel (Author)
The nineteenth century witnessed an unprecedented increase in art forgery, caused both by the advent of national museums and by a rapidly growing bourgeois interest in collecting objects from the past. This rise had profound repercussions on notions of selfhood and national identity within and outside the realm of art. Although art critics denounced forgery for its affront to artistic traditions, they were fascinated by its power to shape the human and object worlds and adopted a language of art forgery to articulate a link between the making of fakes and the making of selves. The Deceivers explores the intersections among artistic crime, literary narrative, and the definition of identity.
Literary texts joined more specialized artistic discourses in describing the various identities associated with art forgery: the forger, the copyist, the art expert, the dealer, the restorer. Built into new characters were assumptions about gender, sexuality, race, and nationality that themselves would come to be presented in a language of artistic authenticity. Aviva Briefel places special emphasis on the gendered distinction between male forgers and female copyists. Copying, a benign occupation when undertaken by a woman, became forgery, laden with criminal intent, when performed by men. Those who could successfully produce, handle, or detect spurious things and selves were distinguished from others who were incapable of distinguishing the authentic from the artistic and human forgeries.
Through close reading of literary narratives such as Trilby and The Marble Faun as well as newspaper accounts of forgery scandals, The Deceivers reveals the identities-both authentic and fake-that emerged from the Victorian culture of forgery.
Format: Hardcover
Pages: 272
Edition: illustrated edition
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Published: 01 Aug 2006
ISBN 10: 0801444608
ISBN 13: 9780801444609
Briefel's concise and elegant study is... about the 'rich rhetoric of forgery' that arose in the literature of that period in England, France, and the United States. Briefel sets out to identify the various identities created by this literature and to show how they reflected biases relating to 'categories of gender, class, race, and nationality.'... The Deceivers presents many original ideas on the complexities of fakery and identity, as well as an authoritative overview of previous scholarship. The text is enriched with a number of black and white illustrations from contemporaneous publications. Briefel's writing is as lively and humorous as that from Punch, making this book a pleasure to read.
* Journal of British Studies *The book reads like a fascinating collection of obscure items, yet it is deceptively relevant. It tells a coherent story of the allure and impenetrability of artworks that are neither true nor false.
* Times Literary Supplement *The Deceivers is engaging, persuasive, and both historically and critically illuminating. Aviva Briefel's prose is alive and unfailingly lucid. Her readings of a wide variety of texts are smart, nuanced, and rich. Briefel manages her diverse materials expertly, forging a cogent narrative of the place of the fake in a persistent social imaginary, one whose effects we still in some sense confront.
-- Ellen Rooney, Brown University