Aesthetics equals politics : new discourses across art, architecture, and philosophy / editor Mark Foster Gage ; managing editor Matt Shaw.
Material type:
Item type | Current library | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Books | MEF Üniversitesi Kütüphanesi | Genel Koleksiyon | BH 301 .P64 A39 2019 (Browse shelf (Opens below)) | Available | 0020184 |
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BH 181 .K35 2012 Kant, Schiller, Heidegger : estetik ve edebiyat/ | BH 221 .B99 B99 2015 Byzantium/modernism : the Byzantine as method in modernity / | BH 301 .M54 G26 1993 Geçmişiyle geleceği arasında kıvranan sanat : çağdaşlık sorunları / | BH 301 .P64 A39 2019 Aesthetics equals politics : new discourses across art, architecture, and philosophy / | BH 301 .S69 Z49 2020 Sanatın karanlığı : insanlar bunu kendileri yapmıştı / | BH 301 .U5 S8613 2007 On ugliness / | BH 301 .U5 S8619 2015 Çirkinliğin tarihi / |
I. The New Foundation of Aesthetic Discourse.
II. Framing the Aesthetic.
III. Aesthetics and The Politics of Practice.
IV. Aesthetic Alternatives.
How aesthetics—understood as a more encompassing framework for human activity—might become the primary discourse for political and social engagement.
These essays make the case for a reignited understanding of aesthetics—one that casts aesthetics not as illusory, subjective, or superficial, but as a more encompassing framework for human activity. Such an aesthetics, the contributors suggest, could become the primary discourse for political and social engagement. Departing from the “critical” stance of twentieth-century artists and theorists who embraced a counter-aesthetic framework for political engagement, this book documents how a broader understanding of aesthetics can offer insights into our relationships not only with objects, spaces, environments, and ecologies, but also with each other and the political structures in which we are all enmeshed.
The contributors—philosophers, media theorists, artists, curators, writers and architects including such notable figures as Jacques Rancière, Graham Harman, and Elaine Scarry—build a compelling framework for a new aesthetic discourse. The book opens with a conversation in which Rancière tells the volume's editor, Mark Foster Gage, that the aesthetic is “about the experience of a common world.” The essays following discuss such topics as the perception of reality; abstraction in ethics, epistemology, and aesthetics as the “first philosophy”; Afrofuturism; Xenofeminism; philosophical realism; the productive force of alienation; and the unbearable lightness of current creative discourse.
https://www.amazon.com/Aesthetics-Equals-Politics-Discourses-Architecture/dp/0262039435