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Rose, Louis. "4. Daumier in Vienna, 1936". Psychology, Art, and Antifascism, New Haven: Yale University Press, 2016, pp. 63-89. https://doi.org/10.12987/9780300224252-006
Rose, L. (2016). 4. Daumier in Vienna, 1936. In Psychology, Art, and Antifascism (pp. 63-89). New Haven: Yale University Press. https://doi.org/10.12987/9780300224252-006
Rose, Louis. "4. Daumier in Vienna, 1936" In Psychology, Art, and Antifascism, 63-89. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2016. https://doi.org/10.12987/9780300224252-006
A vivid portrait of two remarkable twentieth-century thinkers and their landmark collaboration on the use and abuse of caricature and propaganda in the modern world
In 1934, Viennese art historian and psychoanalyst Ernst Kris invited his mentee E. H. Gombrich to collaborate on a project that had implications for psychology and neuroscience, and foreshadowed their contributions to the Allied war effort. Their subject: caricature and its use and abuse in propaganda. Their collaboration was a seminal early effort to integrate science, the humanities, and political awareness. In this fascinating biographical and intellectual study, Louis Rose explores the content of Kris and Gombrich’s project and its legacy.