Anna-Maria Hallgren
 

Contact: anna-maria.hallgren@arthistory.su.se

Research project: My PhD thesis explores how certain practices of looking were encouraged in representations of moral decay and degeneration in the late-nineteenth-century visual culture in Sweden. These representations concerned, for example, criminality, poverty and prostitution – problems that were to a high degree tied to the urban environment. Furthermore, the thesis explores how these practices of looking were incorporated into the urban space of Stockholm. In this context, the conception of an “underworld”, a dark side of the city, becomes important. It was a place connected to “the gory and the gruesome”, the poor, the unfortunate and the unscrupulous women. It was a place marked by the past but also a place possible to change. What could be learned by looking at gruesome sights at wax museums? By taking part in representations of prostitution in the illustrated press? How can this be connected to ambitions to create an orderly society of responsible citizens?

Principal supervisor: Sabrina Norlander Eliasson, The Swedish Institute, Rome

Supervisor: Tomas Björk, Department of Art History, Stockholm University

Interests: 19th-century visual culture, cultural history, urban culture, materiality, space/place.