Here, for the first time, Christopher Kul-Want brings together
twenty-five texts on art written by twenty philosophers. Covering
the Enlightenment to postmodernism, these essays draw on
Continental philosophy and aesthetics, the Marxist intellectual
tradition, and psychoanalytic theory, and each is accompanied by an
overview and interpretation.
The volume features Martin Heidegger on Van Gogh's shoes and the
meaning of the Greek temple; Georges Bataille on Salvador Dal?'s
"The Lugubrious Game"; Theodor W. Adorno on capitalism and collage;
Walter Benjamin and Roland Barthes on the uncanny nature of
photography; Sigmund Freud on Leonardo Da Vinci and his
interpreters; Jacques Lacan and Julia Kristeva on the paintings of
Holbein; Freud's postmodern critic, Gilles Deleuze on the visceral
paintings of Francis Bacon; and Giorgio Agamben on the twin
traditions of the Duchampian ready-made and Pop Art. Kul-Want
elucidates these texts with essays on aesthetics, from Hegel and
Nietzsche to Badiou and Ranci?re, demonstrating how philosophy
adopted a new orientation toward aesthetic experience and
subjectivity in the wake of Kant's powerful legacy.
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