What Does 'Art' Mean Now? : The Personal after the Age of Romanticism and Modernism

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What Does 'Art' Mean Now? : The Personal after the Age of Romanticism and Modernism

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  • 製本 Hardcover:ハードカバー版/ページ数 210 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9781032446820
  • DDC分類 709.05

Full Description

What Does 'Art' Mean Now? asks, and answers, fundamental questions about the nature of aesthetic experience and role of the arts in contemporary society. The Modern Age, Romanticism and beyond, viewed art as something transcending and separated from life, and usually something encountered in museums or classrooms. Nowadays, however, art tends to be defined not by a commonly agreed-upon standard of "quality" or by its forms, such as painting and sculpture, but instead by political and ideological criteria. So how do we connect with the works in museums whose point was precisely that they stood apart from such considerations? Can we and should we be educated to "appreciate" art—and what does it do for us anyway? What are we to make of the so-different newer works—installations, performances, excerpts from the world—held to be art that increasingly make it into museums? Adopting a subjectivist approach, this book argues that in the absence of a universal judgment or standard of taste, the experience of art is one of freedom. The arts give us the means to conceptualize our lives, showing us ourselves as we are and as we might wish—or not wish—to be, as well as where we have been and where we are going. It will appeal to scholars of sociology, philosophy, museum studies, and art history, and to anyone interested in, or puzzled by, museums or college courses and their presentation of art today.

Contents

Part I THEORY

1 Esthetics Beyond Esthetics: The Demise of the Separated Artwork

2 A Definition of Art for Our Times: Personal/Impersonal, Impersonal/Personal

3 Correcting Modernism: Putting the Subjective Back In

4 Nailing the Problem a Century Ago: Dewey's Art as Experience

5 Our Situation Now: Blurring the Line Between Art and the World

Part II MUSEUMS

6 Audience and Survival: Two Aspects That Define Art

7 Principles of Ordering the Separated Artwork: Museums and Collections

8 Unconventional Ordering: Ripley's "Believe it—OR NOT!"

9 What Counts as an Artwork: The Small Hard Things of the Bactrian Hoard

10 Do Museums Come to Life at Night?: The Revenge of the Separated Work

Part III LITERATURE

11 What's Literature Good For?: Mirroring/Escape and Explanation/Vaccination

12 It Isn't Fake Anything: Literature and the World

13 Problems with Literature

Who's the Work For?

What Does the Audience Know?

Inside/Outside: Villette

When We Just Don't Like a Work

Works Cited

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