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- Provides a cross-disciplinary overview of design theory through
the lens of cultural studies, aesthetics and history - Offers a
departure from the traditional compartmentalization of practice,
history and theory - Engages student readers in contemporary design
debates surrounding responsibility, cultural and social awareness
and the contexts products are manufactured within.
This book offers a new definition of metaphor-as an ontological and
visual construction, whose roots are external visual forms, and its
motivation is our attachment to forms. This definition, which
Michalle Gal names "visualist," challenges the ruling conceptualist
theory of metaphors and places a new emphasis on how we experience
rather than understand metaphors. In doing so, she responds to the
visual turn that is taking place in literature and the media,
demanding that the visual become a site of philosophical analysis.
This focus on the external visual world allows Gal to employ visual
theories to capture the essence of metaphor. She looks beyond
conceptual or semantic mechanism, and returns to theories of
Arnheim and Gombrich and the current evolution of ideas about the
visual or material and embodied cognition. Proposing to see visual
metaphors in their basic form, she uses a new externalist
terminology of ontology, visuality, composition, affordance,
construction, and emergence. Setting out a new theory that takes
into account that humans are visual no less than cognitive
creatures, Visual Metaphors and Aesthetics lays the foundation for
a new vocabulary to talk about metaphors.
- Provides a cross-disciplinary overview of design theory through
the lens of cultural studies, aesthetics and history - Offers a
departure from the traditional compartmentalization of practice,
history and theory - Engages student readers in contemporary design
debates surrounding responsibility, cultural and social awareness
and the contexts products are manufactured within.
This book offers a new definition of metaphor—as an ontological
and visual construction, whose roots are external visual forms, and
its motivation is our attachment to forms. This definition, which
Michalle Gal names “visualist,” challenges the ruling
conceptualist theory of metaphors and places a new emphasis on how
we experience rather than understand metaphors. In doing so, she
responds to the visual turn that is taking place in literature and
the media, demanding that the visual become a site of philosophical
analysis. This focus on the external visual world allows Gal to
employ visual theories to capture the essence of metaphor. She
looks beyond conceptual or semantic mechanism, and returns to
theories of Arnheim and Gombrich and the current evolution of ideas
about the visual or material and embodied cognition. Proposing to
see visual metaphors in their basic form, she uses a new
externalist terminology of ontology, visuality, composition,
affordance, construction, and emergence. Setting out a new theory
that takes into account that humans are visual no less than
cognitive creatures, Visual Metaphors and Aesthetics lays the
foundation for a new vocabulary to talk about metaphors.
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