In this innovative, interdisciplinary study, James Elkins argues against
the assumption that images can be adequately described in words. In his
view, words must always fail because pictures possess a residue of
'meaningless' marks that cannot be apprehended as signs. On Pictures and
the Words that Fail Them is a 1998 text which provides detailed,
incisive critiques of fundamental notions about pictures: their
allegedly semiotic structures; the 'rational' nature of realism; and the
ubiquity of the figure-ground relation. Elkins then opens the concept of
images to non-Western and prehistoric ideas, exploring Chinese concepts
of magic, Mesopotamian practices of counting and sculpture, religious
ideas about hypostasis, philosophical discussions concerning
invisibility and blindness, and questions on the limits of the
destruction of meaning.