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Bioaesthetics: Making Sense of Life in Science and the Arts
Hardback
Main Details
Description
In recent years, bioaesthetics has used the latest discoveries in evolutionary studies and neuroscience to provide new ways of looking at art and aesthetics. Carsten Strathausen's remarkable exploration of this emerging field is the first comprehensive account of its ideas, as well as a timely critique of its limitations. Strathausen familiariz
Author Biography
Carsten Strathausen is professor of German and English and Catherine Paine Middlebush Chair in Humanities at the University of Missouri. He is editor of A Leftist Ontology: Beyond Relativism and Identity Politics (Minnesota, 2009) and author of The Look of Things: Poetry and Vision around 1900, as well as translator of Under Suspicion: A Phenomenology of Media by Boris Groys.
Reviews"If you've ever wondered how we've gotten to the point where virtually every cultural theory field now boasts a 'bio-' or 'neuro-' subfield, Carsten Strathausen's Bioaesthetics is an excellent guide. Setting the stage with scrupulous readings of historical controversies, Strathausen then incisively critiques the reductionist 'biologism' he finds in 'literary Darwinism,' 'biopoetics,' 'neuroaestethics,' and so on, before judiciously tackling Deleuze and affect theory. A powerful and insightful study, Bioaesthetics rewards the reader with clarifying and careful mappings of important contemporary concepts."-John Protevi, author of Life, War, Earth: Deleuze and the Sciences
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