Speaking of Art e-bog
436,85 DKK
(inkl. moms 546,06 DKK)
As the title of this book was meant to suggest, its subject is the way we talk about (and write about) works of art: or, rather, one of the ways, namely, the way we describe works of art for critical purposes. Be- cause I wished to restrict my subject matter in this way, I have made a sharp, and no doubt largely artificial distinction between describing and evaluating. And I must, at the outset...
E-bog
436,85 DKK
Forlag
Springer
Udgivet
6 december 2012
Genrer
Philosophy: aesthetics
Sprog
English
Format
pdf
Beskyttelse
LCP
ISBN
9789401024129
As the title of this book was meant to suggest, its subject is the way we talk about (and write about) works of art: or, rather, one of the ways, namely, the way we describe works of art for critical purposes. Be- cause I wished to restrict my subject matter in this way, I have made a sharp, and no doubt largely artificial distinction between describing and evaluating. And I must, at the outset, guard against a misreading of this distinction to which I have left myself open. In distinguishing between evaluative and descriptive aesthetic judgments, I am not saying that when I assert "e;X is p,"e; where p is a "e;descriptive"e; term like "e;unified,"e; or "e;delicate,"e; or "e;garish,"e; I may not at the same time be evaluating X too; and I am not saying that when I make the obviously "e;evaluative"e; assertion "e;X is good,"e; I may not be describing X. Clearly, if I say "e;X is unified"e; I am evaluating X in that unity is a good-making feature of works of art; and as it is correct in English at least to call an evaluation a description, I do not want to suggest that if an assertion is evaluative, it cannot be de- scriptive (although there have been many philosophers who have thought this indeed to be the case).