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The Insistence of Art

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The essays in The Insistence of Art suggest ways in which the artworks and practices of the early modern period show the essentiality of aesthetic experience for philosophical reflection, and in pa...
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  • 03 April 2017
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Philosophers working on aesthetics have paid considerable attention to art and artists of the early modern period. Yet early modern artistic practices scarcely figure in recent work on the emergence of aesthetics as a branch of philosophy over the course the eighteenth century. This book addresses that gap, elaborating the extent to which artworks and practices of the fifteenth through the eighteenth centuries were accompanied by an immense range of discussions about the arts and their relation to one another.

Rather than take art as a stand-in for or reflection of some other historical event or social phenomenon, this book treats art as a phenomenon in itself. The contributors suggest ways in which artworks and practices of the early modern period make aesthetic experience central to philosophical reflection, while also showing art’s need for philosophy.

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Price: $39.00
Pages: 304
Publisher: Fordham University Press
Imprint: Fordham University Press
Publication Date: 03 April 2017
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780823275809
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

ART / Movements / Renaissance, PHILOSOPHY / Aesthetics, LITERARY CRITICISM / Renaissance

This collection on early modern aesthetics of doesn't just fill a gap: In its emphatic refusal to cordon off the Renaissance, and in its conviction that art is no passive mirror but a 'matrix through which social reality is established,' it is a welcome corrective. Dante and Ficino, Donne and Shakespeare, Bellori and Caravaggio, Goya and Pater—with Herder, Hegel, Paul de Man and Kierkeegard making memorable cameos—populate an early modernity that looks ahead to modernism.---—Andrei Pop, University of Chicago
Paul Kottman is Associate Professor of Comparative Literature at the New School for Social Research. He is the author of Love as Human Freedom(forthcoming), Tragic Conditions in Shakespeare: Disinheriting the Globe, and A Politics of the Scene.