Building on concepts developed in his previously published New
Theory of Beauty, Guy Sircello constructs a bold and provocative
theory of love in which the objects of love are the qualities that
"bear" beauty and the pleasure of all love is "erotic," without
being "sexual." The theory reveals a continuity of subject matter
between premodern notions of love and modern notions of aesthetic
pleasure, thus providing grounds for criticizing modern tendencies
to isolate the aesthetic both culturally and psychologically and to
separate it from its home in the human body.
The author begins with an analysis of enjoyment that reduces all
enjoyment to the enjoyment of the "experience of qualities." He
explains how we experience qualities as "circulating" in a special
form of "space" that includes our own bodies, the external world,
and their interpenetration. Sircello generalizes this analysis to
encompass all forms of love and grounds the pleasure of all
love--aesthetic or nonaesthetic, personal or nonpersonal, sexual or
nonsexual--in an experience of the form of an "overall bodily
caress."
Originally published in 1989.
The Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest print-on-demand
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