From an aesthetic point of view: philosophy, art, and the senses

London: Serpent's Tail (2000)
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Abstract

Contemporary visual art stands on the ruins of beauty. What is the place of aesthetic in the experience of such art? And how has it changed in the two hundred years since the emergence of the modern conception of art as the object of a distinctive kind of pleasure? The essays in this volume, by philosophers and art theorists from Britain, France, Germany and the USA, investigate the changing role of the aesthetic in art. In writing that is both lucid and challenging, the contributors make clear that the importance a society places on art and aesthetic is a barometer of its very health.

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Peter Osborne
Kingston University

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Books received. [REVIEW][author unknown] - 2003 - International Journal of Philosophical Studies 11 (4):493-499.

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