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Showing 1 - 6 of
6 matches in All Departments
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Phenomenology and the Arts (Paperback)
A. Licia Carlson, Peter Costello; Contributions by John Russon, Galen A. Johnson, John Lysaker, …
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R1,900
Discovery Miles 19 000
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Phenomenology and the Arts develops the interplay between
phenomenology as a historical movement and a descriptive method
within Continental philosophy and the arts. Divided into five
themes, the book explores first how the phenomenological method
itself is a kind of artistic endeavor that mirrors what it
approaches when it turns to describe paintings, dramas, literature,
and music. From there, the book turns to an analysis and commentary
on specific works of art within the visual arts, literature, music,
and sculpture. Contributors analyze important historical figures in
phenomenology-Kant, Hegel, Husserl, Heidegger, and Merleau-Ponty.
But there is also a good deal of work on art itself-Warhol, Klee,
jazz, and contemporary and renaissance artists and artworks. Edited
by Peter R. Costello and Licia Carlson, this book will be of
interest to students in philosophy, the arts, and the humanities in
general, and scholars of phenomenology will notice incredibly rich,
groundbreaking research that helps to resituate canonical figures
in phenomenology with respect to what their works can be used to
describe.
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Phenomenology and the Arts (Hardcover)
A. Licia Carlson, Peter Costello; Contributions by John Russon, Galen A. Johnson, John Lysaker, …
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R4,246
Discovery Miles 42 460
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Phenomenology and the Arts develops the interplay between
phenomenology as a historical movement and a descriptive method
within Continental philosophy and the arts. Divided into five
themes, the book explores first how the phenomenological method
itself is a kind of artistic endeavor that mirrors what it
approaches when it turns to describe paintings, dramas, literature,
and music. From there, the book turns to an analysis and commentary
on specific works of art within the visual arts, literature, music,
and sculpture. Contributors analyze important historical figures in
phenomenology-Kant, Hegel, Husserl, Heidegger, and Merleau-Ponty.
But there is also a good deal of work on art itself-Warhol, Klee,
jazz, and contemporary and renaissance artists and artworks. Edited
by Peter R. Costello and Licia Carlson, this book will be of
interest to students in philosophy, the arts, and the humanities in
general, and scholars of phenomenology will notice incredibly rich,
groundbreaking research that helps to resituate canonical figures
in phenomenology with respect to what their works can be used to
describe.
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