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20th Century Aesthetics: Towards A Theory of Feeling
Hardback
Main Details
Description
In our contemporary age aesthetics seems to crumble and no longer be reducible to a coherent image. And yet given the vast amount of works in aesthetics produced in the last hundred years, this age could be defined "the century of aesthetics". 20th Century Aesthetics is a new account of international aesthetic thought by Mario Perniola, one of Italy's leading contemporary thinkers. Starting from four conceptual fields - life, form, knowledge, action - Perniola identifies the lines of aesthetic reflection that derive from them and elucidates them with reference to major authors: from Dilthey to Foucault (aesthetics of life), from Woelfflin to McLuhan and Lyotard (aesthetics of form), from Croce to Goodman (aesthetics and knowledge), from Dewey to Bloom (aesthetics and action). There is also a fifth one that touches on the sphere of affectivity and emotionality, and which comes to aesthetics from thinkers like Freud, Heidegger, Wittgenstein, Lacan, Derrida and Deleuze. The volume concludes with an extensive sixth chapter on Japanese, Chinese, Indian, Islamic, Brazilian, South Korean and South East Asian aesthetic thought and on the present decline of Western aesthetic sensibility.
Author Biography
Mario Perniola is Professor of Aesthetics and Director of the Centre for Study and Research, "Language and Thought" at the University of Rome, Tor Vergata. His books in English include The Sex-appeal of the Inorganic (Continuum), Art and Its Shadow (Continuum), Enigmas: The Egyptian Moment in Society and Art (Verso) and Ritual Thinking: Sexuality, Death, World (Humanity Books). Among his recent works published with Einaudi Contro la comunicazione e Miracoli e trauma della comunicazione. He has also written for Art Forum, Zone and SubStance and is editor of the journal of aesthetics and cultural studies, Agalma. Massimo Verdicchio, the translator, is Professor of Italian in the Department of Modern Languages and Cultural Studies at the University of Alberta, Canada.
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