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Diversity Reading List

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

African Arts and Difference

Posted on March 26, 2020December 3, 2024 by Björn Fretter

Abstract: In this chapter, I examine the role African art play in the institutionalization of difference in African traditions. I am particularly interested in how aesthetic signs and symbols or other forms of art are employed by persons of an African culture to differentiate themselves or set themselves apart from other persons within the same culture or other cultures. Such forms of art of interest here include modes of dressing, tribal marks, hairstyles, and nonverbal signs of communication. I assert in this chapter that these aesthetic forms of difference are in some way institutionalized into the fabric of culture that they are taken by members of the society as objective givens and often not subject to questioning. Hence the othering is sustained and maintained through time. I also argue that these forms of differences sustained through art often promote inequality and preferential treatment of the self over and above the other. A case in mind is the preferential treatment of female folks from the royal family as against those who are not from the royal family, a difference clearly made visible through art.

Posted in Aesthetic Experience and Judgement, Applied Ethics, Culture, Ethics and Socio-Politics of Aesthetics, Justice, Normative Ethics, Personal and Social Identity, RaceTagged aesthetics, African art, Difference, Signs, SymbolsLeave a comment

How Do Cross-Cultural Studies Impact Upon the Conventional Definition of Art?

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

Abstract: While Stephen Davies argues that a debate on cross-cultural aesthetics is possible if we adopt an attitude of mutual respect and forbearance, his fellow symposiasts shed light upon different aspects which merit a closer scrutiny in such a dialogue. Samer Akkach warns that an inclusivistic embrace of difference runs the risk of collapsing the very difference one sought to understand. Julie Nagam underscores that local knowledge carriers and/or the medium should be involved in such a cross-cultural exploration. Enrico Fongaro searches for a way of experiencing cross-cultural art such that it can lead to a transformative experience Relatedly, Meilin Chinn uses the analogy of friendship to explore the edifying dimension of experiencing an art form. Lastly, John Powell studies whether Dickie’s Institutional Theory can be meaningfully used to identify works of art in Western and non-Western traditions.

Posted in Aesthetic Experience and Judgement, Aesthetic Normativity and Value, Ethics and Socio-Politics of Philosophy, Metaphysics of AestheticsTagged artworld, bodily experience of art, fusion of horizons, garden, islam, Kitarō Nishida, ZhuangziLeave a comment

African Art in Deep Time: De‐race‐ing Aesthetics and De‐racializing Visual Art

Posted on January 14, 2020December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Abstract: In two essays in the ART/Artifact(1988) exhibition catalog, white American museum curator Susan Vogel and white American philosopher Arthur Danto pronounce that Africans do not distinguish between art and nonart. Although seemingly objective empirical statements, their assertions about Africa and its art are racially based ruminations of a white supremacist worldview. I argue that in theorizing within the category of race they produced racialized aesthetics that commit the Eurocentric fallacy of upholding systemic racist objectives. I argue that (1) their assertions fail to be about African art, but about hegemony and power; (2) as the longest enduring artistic activity of humanity, African art is an important check to racialized aesthetics; (3) art is produced outside the category of race and from a critically conscious awareness of the world; and (4) art bespeaks creativity and presupposes the artistic and moral values of a culture in the manipulation and transformation of physical reality.

Posted in Aesthetic Experience and Judgement, Aesthetic Normativity and Value, Culture, Ethics and Socio-Politics of Aesthetics, RaceTagged art and culture, Eurocentrism, racismLeave a comment

Art, Property Rights, and the Interests of Humanity

Posted on November 27, 2017December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Summary: In this paper, Thompson sets up a potential tension between two kinds of cases. On the one hand, we might think it is wrong for a wealthy collector to destroy great works of Western art that have value for all of humanity. On the other hand, we might think it is acceptable for indigenous peoples to rebury or ritually destroy artifacts from their culture, even though these works might also have value for all of humanity. How do we reconcile these intuitions? After discussing and dismissing attempts to resolve the problem by appeal to the value of the property for its possessors or the desires of non-owners, Thompsons suggests that by looking at the value of art in the context of different cultural traditions we can see why a certain universalism about the value of art will tell against allowing the destruction of artwork by the wealthy collector, but allow for the reburial or destruction of artifacts by certain indigenous communities.

Posted in Applied Ethics, Culture, Ethics and Socio-Politics of Aesthetics, Freedom and Rights, Personal and Social IdentityTagged art, destroying art, property rightsLeave a comment

Repatriation and the Concept of Inalienable Possession

Posted on November 27, 2017December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Summary: The concept of inalienable possession often figures centrally in debates about repatriation of cultural artifacts (which are also often artworks). The right of alienability (or the right to transfer title to property) is one of the core rights in Western property theory. If property is inalienable, this means that title to it cannot rightly be transferred. In this paper, Coleman analyzes the concept of inalienable possession, and argues that laws (such as the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA)) can foist a conception of inalienable possession on indigenous peoples that can be inaccurate to past and changing cultural norms. She uses this point to offer a distinction between property and ownership. This opens up conceptual space for a link between objects and identity through ownership that might nevertheless allow for the alienability of such property.

Posted in Applied Ethics, Culture, Ethics and Socio-Politics of Aesthetics, Freedom and Rights, Personal and Social IdentityTagged art, cultural artifact, cultural property, inalienable possession, ownership, property, property rights, rightsLeave a comment

Categories

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Aesthetics
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Aesthetic Experience and Judgement
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Aesthetic Normativity and Value
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Artistic Movements
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Artistry and Creativity
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Ethics and Socio-Politics of Aesthetics
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Individual Arts and Crafts
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Metaphysics of Aesthetics
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Epistemology
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Applied Epistemology
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Metaepistemology
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Ontology and Metaontology
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Space, Time, and Space-Time
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Applied Ethics
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Political Authority and Legitimacy
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Political Economy
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Social Philosophy
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Class
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Personal and Social Identity
(149)
Race
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Sustainability
(23)
Technology and Material Culture
(12)
Work, Labor, and Leisure
(49)

Keywords

abortion aesthetics art art classification autonomy causation Chinese philosophy colonialism confucianism consciousness consent depiction desire disability epistemology equality ethics experimental philosophy feminism feminist philosophy fiction gender identity imagination justice Kant knowledge logic metaphysics methodology mind models perception philosophy of language philosophy of mind philosophy of religion philosophy of science portrait race representation responsibility science sex truth virtue

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