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Books > Philosophy > Topics in philosophy > Aesthetics
The Dardenne Brothers' Cinematic Parables examines the work of
Belgian filmmakers Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne, who have been
celebrated for their powerfully affecting social realist films.
Though the Dardenne brothers' films rarely mention religion or God,
they have received wide recognition for their moral complexity and
spiritual resonance. This book brings the Dardennes' filmography
into consideration with theological aesthetics, Christian ethics,
phenomenological film theory, and continental philosophy. The
author explores the brothers' nine major films-beginning with The
Promise (1996) and culminating in Young Ahmed (2019)-through the
hermeneutics of philosopher Paul Ricoeur. By using Ricoeur's
description of "parable" as a "narrative-metaphor" which generates
an existential limit-experience, Joel Mayward crafts an innovative
Ricoeurian hermeneutic for making theological interpretations of
cinema. Drawing upon resources from three disciplinary
spheres-theology, philosophy, and film studies-in a dynamic
interweaving approach, Mayward proposes that the Dardennes create
postsecular cinematic parables which evoke theological and ethical
responses in audiences' imaginations through the brothers'
distinctive filmmaking style, what is termed "transcendent
realism." The book ultimately demonstrates how the Dardenne
brothers are truly doing, not merely depicting, theology and ethics
through the cinematic form-it presents film as theology, what
Mayward refers to as "theocinematics." This is valuable reading for
scholars of theology, philosophy, and film studies, as well as film
critics and cinephiles interested in the cinema of the Dardenne
brothers.
Thirteen essays in the book explore and investigate diverse
contemporary philosophically current themes and issues. The title
is derived from Wittgenstein's statement that 'anguage is a
labyrinth of paths,' and it studiously avoids any conclusive claim
on its central motif. What people, both users and theorists, do
with language, rather than what it is, is the running theme. The
book critically presents the views of a wide range of
philosophically and analytically oriented authors including, de
Saussure, Levinas, Levi-Strauss, Wittgenstein, Derrida, Bakhtin,
Benjamin, Kafka, Heidegger, Blanchot, Jean-Luc Nancy, Barthes and
Deleuze. Only two essays diverge from the main concern with
language: the one on the discourse of death, and another on the
philosophy of image. One essay involves an analysis of the cultural
and political discourse in a contemporary Malayalam novel. The
concluding essay attempts to develop a postcolonial field of
language studies, with reference to the works of the 18th century
British jurist and linguist Sir William Jones and the subsequent
philological tradition, whose political consequences are only
beginning to be understood.
Suffering Art Gladly is concerned with the ostensibly paradoxical
phenomenon of negative emotions involved in the experience of art:
how can we explain the pleasure felt or satisfaction taken in such
experience when it is the vehicle of negative emotions, that is,
ones that seem to be unpleasant or undesirable, and that one
normally tries to avoid experiencing? The question is as old as
philosophical reflection on the arts, beginning with Plato and
Aristotle, and subsequently addressed by Hume, Burke, Diderot,
Kant, and Schopenhauer, among others. Moreover, it is still an
important and unresolved question in contemporary philosophy of
art, where the discussion has been notably enlivened by recent
research on the nature of imagination, cognition, and the emotions.
Suffering Art Gladly comprises essays of two kinds, though the
division between them is not airtight. The first kind are essays
with a primarily historical focus, examining the problem of
negative emotion from art as treated by important figures in the
history of aesthetic thought, including Aristotle, Hume, Diderot,
Kant, and Schopenhauer. The second kind are essays with a primarily
contemporary focus, in which the methods and tools of contemporary
analytic philosophy are much in evidence. In addition to the
thirteen essays forming the heart of the book there is a general
introduction by the editor, motivating the basic problem with which
the essays are variously concerned and identifying the
presuppositions or assumptions that are involved in different
solutions to the problem. The individual essays are wide-ranging,
dealing with a variety of artforms, negative emotions, and specific
works of art, and the contributors, all recognized scholars in the
field of aesthetics, are a mixture of junior and senior figures
representing seven nationalities.
This book unveils the concept of social love as a kind of "Karst
River" that flows through the history of sociology, reassessing it
as a form criticism by people in everyday life. Adopting an
interdisciplinary perspective, this book offers both theoretical
and empirical reflections on social love. It shows that love is not
only central to the human experience, but that it can also help to
interpret and intervene in social problems such as climate change,
poverty, xenophobia, and the (post-)Covid crisis, recognizing
people as actors in social change. It explores the idea of love as
a key element in the promotion of solidarity and recognition in
today's plural and unequal societies. Based on empirical research
on social love conducted through both qualitative and quantitative
methods, especially in Europe and Latin America, this book explores
the social dimension of love. Providing overviews on key questions
and studies on current issues, the book is essential reference and
resource for researchers, students, social workers, and
professionals in social sciences, social philosophy, anthropology,
social psychology, sociology of emotions and postmodern literature.
The thoroughly contemporary question of the relationship between
emotion and reason was debated with such complexity by the
philosophers of the 17th century that their concepts remain a
source of inspiration for today's research about the emotionality
of the mind. The analyses of the works of Descartes, Spinoza,
Leibniz, and many other thinkers collected in this volume offer new
insights into the diversity and significance of philosophical
reflections about emotions during the early modern era. A focus is
placed on affective components in learning processes and the
boundaries between emotions and reason.
Jacques Ranciere has been hugely influential in field of political
philosophy and aesthetics. This edited collection is the first to
investigate the points of contact between the work of Ranciere and
the field of theatre and performance studies. From theatrocracy to
emancipated spectators, recent scholarly works in this discipline
have drawn upon concepts from Ranciere's writing to investigate
problems of audience, participation, politics and pedagogy. Before
these concepts and critical tools peel away from the works through
which they emerged, this book seeks a detailed critical assessment
of the works themselves and their implications for theatre and
performance studies. The collection examines the critical and
analytical interventions that have been made to date and looks
forward, towards challenges to the future uses of Ranciere's work
in performance. This book project includes work by fourteen
scholars and is an essential resource for researchers and academics
working in all areas of performance and identity, performance and
activism, and performance and philosophy.
Against Value in the Arts and Education proposes that it is often
the staunchest defenders of art who do it the most harm, by
suppressing or mollifying its dissenting voice, by neutralizing its
painful truths, and by instrumentalizing its ambivalence. The
result is that rather than expanding the autonomy of thought and
feeling of the artist and the audience, art's defenders make art
self-satisfied, or otherwise an echo-chamber for the limited and
limiting self-description of people's lives lived in an "audit
culture", a culture pervaded by the direct and indirect excrescence
of practices of accountability. This book diagnoses the
counter-intuitive effects of the rhetoric of value. It posits that
the auditing of values pervades the fabric of people's work-lives,
their education, and increasingly their everyday experience. The
book uncovers figures of resentment, disenchantment and alienation
fostered by the dogma of value. It argues instead that value
judgments can behave insidiously, and incorporate aesthetic,
ethical or ideological values fundamentally opposed to the "value"
they purportedly name and describe. The collection contains
contributions from leading scholars in the UK and US with
contributions from anthropology, the history of art, literature,
education, musicology, political science, and philosophy.
This volume re-examines traditional interpretations of the rise of
modern aesthetics in eighteenth-century Britain and Germany. It
provides a new account that connects aesthetic experience with
morality, science, and political society. In doing so, it
challenges long-standing teleological narratives that emphasize
disinterestedness and the separation of aesthetics from moral,
cognitive, and political interests. The chapters are divided into
three thematic parts. The chapters in Part I demonstrate the
heteronomy of eighteenth-century British aesthetics. They chart the
evolution of aesthetic concepts and discuss the ethical and
political significance of the aesthetic theories of several key
figures: namely, the third Earl of Shaftesbury, David Hume, and
Adam Smith. Part II explores the ways in which eighteenth-century
German, and German-oriented, thinkers examine aesthetic experience
and moral concerns, and relate to the work of their British
counterparts. The chapters here cover the work of Kant, Moses
Mendelssohn, Alexander Gottlieb Baumgarten, and Madame de Stael.
Finally, Part III explores the interrelation of science,
aesthetics, and a new model of society in the work of Goethe,
Johann Wilhelm Ritter, Friedrich Hoelderlin, and William Hazlitt,
among others. This volume develops unique discussions of the rise
of aesthetic autonomy in the eighteenth century. In bringing
together well-known scholars working on British and German
eighteenth-century aesthetics, philosophy, and literature, it will
appeal to scholars and advanced students in a range of disciplines
who are interested in this topic.
This book addresses how our revisionary practices account for
relations between texts and how they are read. It offers an
overarching philosophy of revision concerning works of fiction,
fact, and faith, revealing unexpected insights about the philosophy
of language, the metaphysics of fact and fiction, and the history
and philosophy of science and religion. Using the novels of J.R.R.
Tolkien as exemplars, the authors introduce a fundamental
distinction between the purely physical and the linguistic aspects
of texts. They then demonstrate how two competing theories of
reference-descriptivism and referentialism-are instead constitutive
of a single semantic account needed to explain all kinds of
revision. The authors also propose their own metaphysical
foundations of fiction and fact. The next part of the book brings
the authors' philosophy of revision into dialogue with Thomas
Kuhn's famous analysis of factual, and specifically scientific,
change. It also discusses a complex episode in the history of
paleontology, demonstrating how scientific and popular texts can
diverge over time. Finally, the authors expand their philosophy of
revision to religious texts, arguing that, rather than being
distinct, such texts are always read as other kinds, that faith
tends to be more important as evidence for religious texts than for
others, and that the latter explains why religious communities tend
to have remarkable historical longevity. Revising Fiction, Fact,
and Faith offers a unique and comprehensive account of the
philosophy of revision. It will be of interest to a wide range of
scholars and advanced students working in philosophy of language,
metaphysics, philosophy of literature, literary theory and
criticism, and history and philosophy of science and religion.
This book offers a unique account of the role imagination plays in
advancing the course of freedom's actualization. It draws on Paul
Ricoeur's philosophical anthropology of the capable human being as
the staging ground for an extended inquiry into the challenges of
making freedom a reality within the history of humankind. This book
locates the abilities we exercise as capable human beings at the
heart of a sustained analysis and reflection on the place of the
idea of justice in a hermeneutics for which every expectation
regarding rights, liberties, and opportunities must be a hope for
humanity as a whole. The vision of a reconciled humanity that for
Ricoeur figures in a philosophy of the will provides an initial
touchstone for a hermeneutics of liberation rooted in a
philosophical anthropology for which the pathetique of human misery
is its non- or pre-philosophical source. By setting the idea of the
humanity in each of us against the backdrop of the necessity of
preserving the tension between the space of our experiences and the
horizons of our expectations, the book identifies the ethical and
political dimensions of the idea of justice's federating force with
the imperative of respect. Paul Ricoeur's Philosophical
Anthropology as Hermeneutics of Liberation will be of interest to
scholars and advanced students working in hermeneutics,
phenomenology, ethics, political theory, and aesthetics.
This study offers the first comprehensive account of Emerson's
philosophy since his philosophical rehabilitation began in the late
1970s. It builds on the historical reconstruction proposed in the
author's previous book, Emerson's Metaphysics, and like that study
draws on the entire Emerson corpus-the poetry and sermons included.
The aim here is expository. The overall though not exclusive
emphasis is on identity, as the first term of Emerson's metaphysics
of identity and flowing or metamorphosis. This metaphysics, or
general conception of the nature of reality, is what grounds his
epistemology and ethics, as well as his esthetic, religious, and
political thought. Acknowledging its primacy enables a general
account like this to avoid the anti-realist overemphasis on
epistemology and language that has often characterized
rehabilitation readings of his philosophy. After an initial chapter
on Emerson's metaphysics, the subsequent chapters devoted to the
other branches of his thought also begin with their "necessary
foundation" in identity, which is the law of things and the law of
mind alike. Perception of identity in metamorphosis is what
characterizes the philosopher, the poet, the scientist, the
reformer, and the man of faith and virtue. Identity of mind and
world is felt in what Emerson calls the moral sentiment. Identity
is Emerson's answer to the Sphinx-riddle of life experienced as a
puzzling succession of facts and events.
This book explores the ethical and psychological dilemmas connected
to the lived experiences of love, uniquely proposing an ethical
framework that can be applied in loving relationships. The book
provides an introduction to the study of ethics, moral psychology,
and ancient philosophy. Examining key themes of love, such as
unconditional love, romantic love, anger, desperation, and
fairness, this book offers the reader a way to exercise and
strengthen their personal critical thinking on ethical dilemmas,
especially in relation to loving feelings. The author believes that
ethics is the heart of love in the same way as logic is the brain
of reasoning; we do not need ethics to love but we can love in a
much healthier way if we train our ethical skills to love. After
laying the theoretical framework for the book, chapters are
organized into themes relating to ethical problems and begin with
an exemplary piece from Greek and Latin literature. Using these
writings as a starting point, Susi Ferrarello discusses whether it
is possible to have a sound ethical theory of love, especially in
cases relating to justice, despair, and rage, and demonstrates how
this framework can be applied in new and established relationships.
Filled with case studies throughout, spiritual exercises are listed
at the end of chapters to help the reader increase their
understanding of love and their ethical choices surrounding
emotional dilemmas. This interdisciplinary book is essential
reading for undergraduate and graduate students who take classes on
ethics, marriage and family therapy, psychology, philosophy,
classics, ancient philosophy, and politics, as well as those
interested in the ethics of love and emotional decision-making.
This book explores the ethical and psychological dilemmas connected
to the lived experiences of love, uniquely proposing an ethical
framework that can be applied in loving relationships. The book
provides an introduction to the study of ethics, moral psychology,
and ancient philosophy. Examining key themes of love, such as
unconditional love, romantic love, anger, desperation, and
fairness, this book offers the reader a way to exercise and
strengthen their personal critical thinking on ethical dilemmas,
especially in relation to loving feelings. The author believes that
ethics is the heart of love in the same way as logic is the brain
of reasoning; we do not need ethics to love but we can love in a
much healthier way if we train our ethical skills to love. After
laying the theoretical framework for the book, chapters are
organized into themes relating to ethical problems and begin with
an exemplary piece from Greek and Latin literature. Using these
writings as a starting point, Susi Ferrarello discusses whether it
is possible to have a sound ethical theory of love, especially in
cases relating to justice, despair, and rage, and demonstrates how
this framework can be applied in new and established relationships.
Filled with case studies throughout, spiritual exercises are listed
at the end of chapters to help the reader increase their
understanding of love and their ethical choices surrounding
emotional dilemmas. This interdisciplinary book is essential
reading for undergraduate and graduate students who take classes on
ethics, marriage and family therapy, psychology, philosophy,
classics, ancient philosophy, and politics, as well as those
interested in the ethics of love and emotional decision-making.
This book discusses the philosophy of influential contemporary
philosopher Peter van Inwagen. Looking at perennial philosophical
problems from a modern point of view, Peter van Inwagen's
philosophy masterfully combines positions that have been considered
irreconcilable: incompatibilism concerning free will, materialism,
organicism, theism and realism concerning fictional entities. As
readers will discover, his arguments are witty, surprising and
deep. The book includes Peter van Inwagen's Munster Lecture of 2015
on free will, as well as eleven papers from the Munster colloquium
discussing central themes of his philosophy, and a reply to each
paper by Peter van Inwagen himself. Introducing his philosophy and
relating his work to other contemporary views, this book is of
interest to graduate students and professionals in philosophy
alike.
Fashion | Sense is designed to explode "fashion," and with it, the
stigma in philosophy against fashion's superficiality. Fashion
appears to be altogether differently occupied, disingenuous and
insubstantial, even sophistic in its pretense to peddle surfaces as
if they were something deep. But is fashion's apparent beguilement
more philosophical than it seems? And is philosophy's longing for
exposed depth concealing fashion in its anti-fashion stance? Using
primarily ancient Greek texts, peppered with allusions to their
echoes across the history of philosophy and contemporary fashion
and pop culture, Gwenda-lin Grewal not only examines the rift
between fashion and philosophy, but also challenges the claim that
fashion is modern. Indeed, fashion's quarrel with philosophy may be
at least as ancient as that infamous quarrel between philosophy and
poetry alluded to in Plato's Republic. And the quest for fashion's
origins, as if a quest for a neutrally-outfitted self, stripped of
the self-awareness that comes with thinking, prompts questions
about human agency and our immersion in time. The touch of
reality's fabric bristles in our relationship to our looks, not
simply through the structure of clothes but in the plot of our
wearing them. Meanwhile, the fashion of our words sharpens our
meaning like a cutting silhouette. Grewal's own writing is
playfully and daringly self-conscious, aware of its style and the
entrapment it arouses from the very first line. The reactions
provoked by fashion's flair, not only among the philosophical set
but also among those who would never deck themselves out in the
title, "philosopher," show it forth as perhaps philosophy's most
important and underestimated doppelganger.
The Sublime in Schopenhauer's Philosophy transforms our
understanding of Schopenhauer's aesthetics and anthropology.
Vandenabeele seeks ultimately to rework Schopenhauer's theory into
a viable form so as to establish the sublime as a distinctive
aesthetic category with a broader existential and metaphysical
significance.
This book compares two major leisure activities - watching sport
and engaging with art. It explores a range of philosophical
questions that arise when sport and art are placed side by side:
The works of Shakespeare, Rembrandt and Mozart have continued to
fill playhouses, galleries and concert halls for centuries since
they were created, while our interest in even the most epic
sporting contests fades after just a few years, or even a single
season. What explains this difference? Sporting contests are merely
games. So why do sports fans attach such great importance to
whether their team wins or loses? Do sporting contests have meaning
in the way works of art do? Beauty is a central value in art. Is it
important in sport? What role does morality play in sport and art?
What value do sport and art contribute to the world and to the
meaning of people's lives?
One of the most difficult problems challenging the human mind is
knowledge of the world in its human, natural, and supra-natural
dimensions: what is the nature of this multidimensional reality?
How do we know and verify the truth of our knowledge claims of this
reality? A contemporary Polish philosopher, Malgorzata Czarnocka,
has advanced one of the most comprehensive and insightful studies
of the cognitive act and the conditions under which it takes place.
The proposition explicated in this book is that Czarnocka's
analysis of perception functions as a model of explanation in our
attempt to know the nature of the being that underlies the
universe. This analysis becomes the basis of the author's
discussion of symbolic truth as a model of explanation and its
other applications.
Emotional Ethics of The Hunger Games expands the 'ethical turn' in
Film Studies by analysing emotions as a source of ethical knowledge
in The Hunger Games films. It argues that emotions, incorporated in
the thematic and aesthetic organization of these films, reflect a
crisis in moral standards. As such they cultivate ethical attitudes
towards such phenomena as totalitarianism, the culture of reality
television, and the society of spectacle. The focus of the argument
is on cinematic aesthetics, which expresses emotions in a way that
highlights their ethical significance, running the gamut from fear
through guilt and shame, to love, anger and contempt. The central
claim of the book is that these emotions are symptomatic of some
moral conflict, which renders The Hunger Games franchise a
meaningful commentary on the affective practice of cinematic
ethics. ''The Hunger Games movies have become iconic symbols for
resistance across the globe. Tarja Laine proposes that this is not
caused by their status as exciting cinematic spectacles, but by
their engaging our emotions. Laine uses The Hunger Games as key
texts for understanding our world, demonstrating that ethics do not
originate from rational considerations, far removed from those
mucky things called emotions. But rather that emotions are at the
core of cinematic ethics." -William Brown, Author of Supercinema:
Film-Philosophy for the Digital Age ''In this elegantly written
exploration of the relationship between aesthetics and emotion in
The Hunger Gamestrilogy, Tarja Laine illuminates the power of film
to embody ethical conflict. Deftly interweaving film-philosophy and
close analysis, Laine traces how these films mobilise complex
emotions, nuancing our thinking about cinema and the spectator.
Laine's book takes The Hunger Games films seriously, demonstrating
with verve why they matter." -Catherine Wheatley, Senior Lecturer
in Film Studies, King's College London, UK ''In this fresh,
engaging, and insightful study of The Hunger Games film trilogy,
Tarja Laine explores the crucial role that emotions play in
appreciation of the ethical qualities of the movies. She forges
productive dialogues between a range of film theory, scholarship on
moral philosophy, and debates on ethics, as she performs a
multi-layered investigation of the aesthetic qualities of the
trilogy, the multiple emotions embodied in these qualities, and the
philosophical-ethical insights that are in turn embedded in these
emotions. The cinematic connection between emotions and ethics that
emerges through Laine's detailed textual analyses confronts us with
complex moral dilemmas while enriching our aesthetic experience.''
-Sarah Cooper, Professor, Film Studies Department, King's College
London, UK
This impressive edited collection investigates the relationship
between British Pop Art pioneer Eduardo Paolozzi and the
philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein. At this time, when Paolozzi's
oeuvre is in the process of being rediscovered, his long-time
fascination with Wittgenstein requires thorough exploration, as it
discloses a deeper understanding of his artistic production,
further helping to reassess the philosopher's actual impact on
visual arts and its theory in the second half of the 20th century.
With 13 diverse and comprehensive chapters, bringing together
philosophers and art historians, this volume aims at retracing and
pondering the influence of Wittgenstein on the idea of art in
Paolozzi, thus giving an unprecedented insight into Wittgenstein's
philosophy as employed by contemporary artists.
Hands on Film is a comprehensive study of the representations and
on-screen uses of the human limb, spanning the history of the
cinema from its birth to contemporary times. It examines how
filmmakers have framed the hand for a variety of effects, from
stylistic to thematic, and for the development of characterisation
and narrative. The book offers insights into how films have created
meaning by focusing on that part of the anatomy and, in turn,
proposes a variety of ways in which its on-screen appearances might
shed light on what it means to be sentient, cultured, and creative
beings in the world.
Aesthetics is no longer merely the philosophy of perception and the
arts. Nelson Goodman, Arthur Danto and others have contributed to
develop aesthetics from a field at the margins of philosophy to one
permeating substantial areas of theoretical and practical
philosophy. New approaches like environmental and ecological
aesthetics widened the understanding of the aesthetics of nature.
The contributions in this volume address the most important issues
in contemporary aesthetics, many of them from a Wittgensteinian
perspective. The 39th International Ludwig Wittgenstein Symposium,
organized by the Austrian Ludwig Wittgenstein Society, was held at
Kirchberg am Wechsel, Lower Austria, from August 7th to 13th 2016
and aimed at taking an inventory of important tendencies and
positions in contemporary aesthetics. The volume includes a
selection of the invited papers.
This handbook brings together the most current and hotly debated
topics in studies about images today. In the first part, the book
gives readers an historical overview and basic diacronical
explanation of the term image, including the ways it has been used
in different periods throughout history. In the second part, the
fundamental concepts that have to be mastered should one wish to
enter into the emerging field of Image Studies are explained. In
the third part, readers will find analysis of the most common
subjects and topics pertaining to images. In the fourth part, the
book explains how existing disciplines relate to Image Studies and
how this new scholarly field may be constructed using both old and
new approaches and insights. The fifth chapter is dedicated to
contemporary thinkers and is the first time that theses of the most
prominent scholars of Image Studies are critically analyzed and
presented in one place.
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