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Diversity Reading List

Helping you include authors from under-represented groups in your teaching

The aesthetic value of ideas

Posted on January 20, 2020December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Introduction: One of the least controversial aspects of the highly provocative project that was early conceptual art was its wholesale rejection of the modernist paradigm. For artists adhering to the conceptual approach, modernism’s loyalty to the notions of beauty, aesthetic sensation, and pleasing form, represented a commitment to obsolete artistic axioms.’ Art, it was argued, should be purged of expressivist or emotivist aims; it was to ‘[free] itself of aesthetic parameters’ and embrace an altogether different ontological platform. On this line, a conceptual artwork was taken to be ‘a piece: and a piece need not be an aesthetic object, or even an object at all’ (Binkley 1977: 265). In contrast to modernism, then, conceptual art set itself, from its very beginning, a distinctively analytic agenda by proposing to revise the kind of thing an artwork can be in order to qualify as such, and pronouncing aesthetics ‘conceptually irrelevant to art’ (Kosuth 1969). It is in view of this that conceptual art, to use the words of some of its most prominent exponents, can be understood as ‘Modernism’s nervous breakdown’ (Art – Language 1997).

Posted in Aesthetic Normativity and Value, Artistic Movements, Individual Arts and CraftsTagged aesthetic value, conceptual artLeave a comment

Love’s Knowledge: Essays on Philosophy and Literature

Posted on January 20, 2020December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Publisher’s Note: This volume brings together Nussbaum’s published papers on the relationship between literature and philosophy, especially moral philosophy. The papers, many of them previously inaccessible to non-specialist readers, explore such fundamental issues as the relationship between style and content in the exploration of ethical issues; the nature of ethical attention and ethical knowledge and their relationship to written forms and styles; and the role of the emotions in deliberation and self-knowledge. Nussbaum investigates and defends a conception of ethical understanding which involves emotional as well as intellectual activity, and which gives a certain type of priority to the perception of particular people and situations rather than to abstract rules. She argues that this ethical conception cannot be completely and appropriately stated without turning to forms of writing usually considered literary rather than philosophical. It is consequently necessary to broaden our conception of moral philosophy in order to include these forms. Featuring two new essays and revised versions of several previously published essays, this collection attempts to articulate the relationship, within such a broader ethical inquiry, between literary and more abstractly theoretical elements.

Posted in Applied Ethics, Individual Arts and CraftsTagged ethics, literature and morals, philosophy in literatureLeave a comment

Appropriation and authorship in contemporary art

Posted on January 20, 2020December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Abstract: Appropriation art has often been thought to support the view that authorship in art is an outmoded or misguided notion. Through a thought experiment comparing appropriation art to a unique case of artistic forgery, I examine and reject a number of candidates for the distinction that makes artists the authors of their work while forgers are not. The crucial difference is seen to lie in the fact that artists bear ultimate responsibility for whatever objectives they choose to pursue through their work, whereas the forger’s central objectives are determined by the nature of the activity of forgery. Appropriation artists, by revealing that no aspect of the objectives an artist pursues are in fact built in to the concept of art, demonstrate artists’ responsibility for all aspects of their objectives and, hence, of their products. This responsibility is constitutive of authorship and accounts for the interpretability of artworks. Far from undermining the concept of authorship in art, then, the appropriation artists in fact reaffirm and strengthen it.

Posted in Aesthetic Experience and Judgement, Aesthetic Normativity and Value, Artistry and Creativity, Culture, Ethics and Socio-Politics of Aesthetics, Freedom and Rights, Gender, Sex, and Sexuality, Justice, Law and Public PolicyTagged aesthetics, appropriation, authorshipLeave a comment

The Music of Our Lives

Posted on January 20, 2020December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Publisher’s Note: Kathleen Higgins argues that the arguments that Plato used to defend the ethical value of music are still applicable today. Music encourages ethically valuable attitudes and behavior, provides practice in skills that are valuable in ethical life, and symbolizes ethical ideals

Posted in Aesthetic Experience and Judgement, Aesthetic Normativity and Value, Individual Arts and Crafts, Mental States and Processes, Metaphysics of AestheticsTagged aesthetics and ethics, music, PlatoLeave a comment

Merit, Aesthetic and Ethical

Posted on January 20, 2020December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Publisher’s Note: To “look good” and to “be good” have traditionally been considered two very different notions. Indeed, philosophers have seen aesthetic and ethical values as fundamentally separate. Now, at the crossroads of a new wave of aesthetic theory, Marcia Muelder Eaton introduces this groundbreaking work, in which a bold new concept of merit where being good and looking good are integrated into one.

Posted in Aesthetic Normativity and Value, MetaethicsTagged aesthetic concepts, merit, valueLeave a comment

Robust Immoralism

Posted on January 20, 2020December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Introduction: Several years after the end of the HBO series The Sopranos , I still miss the characters. In particu lar, I miss the protagonist, Tony, who feels like an old friend. This affection of mine for the fictional mob boss gives me pause. After all, Tony Soprano is a murderer, a liar, a thief, an extortionist, and a womanizer; he is pathologically callous, selfish, bigoted, racist, homophobic, and self-centered. So why do I sympathize with him? Why do I admire him? What makes me like him so much?

Posted in Metaethics, Normative EthicsTagged ethical criticism, moral persuasion, resistanceLeave a comment

Protected space: Politics, censorship, and the arts

Posted on January 20, 2020December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Abstract: Anniversaries are appropriate times for reflection. On this, the 50th anniversary of the Ameri can Society for Aesthetics, I want to explore a complicated and confusing situation currently facing Anglo-American aesthetics. Works of art were once esteemed as objects of beauty. I In the past several years, however, artists have been accused of encouraging teenage suicide, urban rage, violence against women, and poisoning American culture. Museum directors have been indicted on obscenity charges, and artists and organizations receiving federal grants have been required to sign pledges that they will not pro mote, disseminate, or produce materials that may be considered obscene. Today in America, as in other times and places, artists face de mands for their art to conform to religious and moral criteria. These demands are not new, but they challenge the view that artistic expression falls under the protection of speech guaranteed by the First Amendment.2

Posted in Aesthetic Experience and Judgement, Aesthetic Normativity and Value, Culture, Freedom and Rights, Gender, Sex, and Sexuality, Justice, Law and Public PolicyTagged aesthetics, censorship, free speech, politicsLeave a comment

Revising the Aesthetic-Nonaesthetic Distinction: The Aesthetic Value of Activist Art

Posted on January 20, 2020December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Introduction: This essay will explore the role that the aesthetic-nonaesthetic distinction plays in assessing activist art by women and artists of color. First, I shall review one traditional line of philosophical thought and show how it serves as the foundation for three types of reasons typically given for artworks reputed to lack aesthetic value. I develop two of the three reasons by examining the recent writings opposed to the aesthetic value of activist art by well-known art critic Donald Kuspit, pointing out his aberrant use of ‘obscene’. Kuspit’s examples of activist art – the work of Jenny Holzer, Barbara Kruger, and Adrian Piper – are presented in light of his charges. I then explore Piper’s art in depth in order to outline ways of expanding the notion of aesthetic value beyond its traditional confines. Finally, I suggest moving beyond entrenched, traditional patterns of assessment and invite underrepresented voices to contribute to the emerging discussion of the multiplicity of aesthetic values.

Posted in Aesthetic Normativity and Value, Ethics and Socio-Politics of AestheticsTagged activist art, aesthetic, non-aesthetic artLeave a comment

Li Yu’s Theory of Drama: A Moderate Moralism

Posted on February 1, 2018December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Abstract: This essay presents an interpretation of Li Yu’s theory of drama that takes it to be a moderate moralism that is different from Confucian radical moralism, Daoist radical autonomism, and the moderate autonomism of fiction. In addition to practical considerations, Li Yu’s moderate moralism of drama is based on his awareness of the ontological difference between drama and music, poetry, and fiction. Drama was seen by Li Yu as a synthetic art that includes music, poetry, and fiction. If radical autonomism is appropriate for the evaluation of music, radical moralism for poetry and prose, and moderate autonomism for fiction, then moderate moralism would be most appropriate in the evaluation of drama.

Posted in Aesthetic Experience and Judgement, Aesthetic Normativity and Value, Metaphysics of AestheticsTagged art, China, Chinese aesthetics, confucianism, drama, moralism, musicLeave a comment

Ownerless Emotions in Rasa-Aesthetics

Posted on February 1, 2018December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Summary: Chakrabarti explores the possibilities of rasa theory via the question of whose emotion is experienced when an audience relishes a work of art. Chakrabarti argues for the existence of a “centerless non-singular subjectivity” according to which the special emotions savored in aesthetic experience do not have specific owners. These personless sentiments indicate an ethical relationship between aesthetic imagination and moral unselfishness.

Posted in Aesthetic Experience and Judgement, Aesthetic Normativity and Value, Metaphysics of AestheticsTagged aesthetic experience, art, emotion, imagination, India, Indian aesthetics, selfLeave a comment

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