Bal has published more than thirty books on a wide range of subjects. Her research interests include
biblical and
classical antiquity,
seventeenth-century and
modern art,
contemporary literature,
feminism,
mental illness, and migratory culture. Bal’s
Narratology: Introduction to the Theory of Narrative (1985) is an introduction to the systematic study of narrative, in which she adopts
structuralist concepts and terms as tools for the analysis of stories. A revised and expanded third edition was published in 2009.
Quoting Caravaggio: Contemporary Art, Preposterous History (1999) investigates how twentieth-century artists set up a dialogue with old-master art. Re-theorizing notions of linear influence and temporality, Bal introduces the concept of ‘pre-posterous history’ to help understand how modern quotations of
Caravaggio renew our understanding of his work. In
Travelling Concepts in the Humanities: A Rough Guide (2002), Bal explores the deployment of concepts in interdisciplinary
cultural analysis. In a series of case studies, Bal eschews more conventional methodologies based on a single paradigm or discipline in favor of an open re-examination of concepts as they ‘travel’ between disciplines, historical periods, and (cultural) contexts. In 2013, Bal completed a trilogy of works on political art. Specifically, she seeks to understand how art can be politically effective without espousing particular political causes. In each of these books, she focuses on the oeuvre of an individual artist and their medium of choice.
Of What One Cannot Speak (2010) examines the work of Colombian sculptor
Doris Salcedo,
Thinking in Film (2013) looks at the video installations of Finnish artist
Eija-Liisa Ahtila, and
Endless Andness (2013) engages with the abstract spatial interventions of Belgian artist
Ann Veronica Janssens. ==Video work==