9781803090344
9781803090351
An engaging exploration of the meaning and power of art that looks at popular theories through the ages.
One of the most astonishing aspects of the discourse on contemporary art is the firm and unwavering belief that art has the power to transform society for the better. There seems to be a consensus around the idea that art, especially visual art, is greatly suited to addressing all manner of social, political, economic, ecological, and other imbalances. Celebrated as a powerful remedy for social grievances, art finds its justification in the service it seems to provide to society.
But as art historian Leonhard Emmerling contends in this timely volume, this presumptuous heroism shows willful blindness towards art’s subjugation to contradictions inherent in social relations. He argues that the narrative of the power of art has its specific history. In trying to reconstruct this history in Art of Diremption, he discovers instead art’s fundamental powerlessness as the foundation for art’s political relevance. Art is weak, argues Emmerling. It, therefore, requires an ethics of weakness, which rejects the discourse of impact and power to enable a politics of art containing the permanence of reflection, the unreliability of thought, and the emergence of form as the event of the new. With a meticulously studied and well-argued case about the “powerlessness of art,” Art of Diremption will be an important contribution to the field of art, aesthetics, and philosophy.
One of the most astonishing aspects of the discourse on contemporary art is the firm and unwavering belief that art has the power to transform society for the better. There seems to be a consensus around the idea that art, especially visual art, is greatly suited to addressing all manner of social, political, economic, ecological, and other imbalances. Celebrated as a powerful remedy for social grievances, art finds its justification in the service it seems to provide to society.
But as art historian Leonhard Emmerling contends in this timely volume, this presumptuous heroism shows willful blindness towards art’s subjugation to contradictions inherent in social relations. He argues that the narrative of the power of art has its specific history. In trying to reconstruct this history in Art of Diremption, he discovers instead art’s fundamental powerlessness as the foundation for art’s political relevance. Art is weak, argues Emmerling. It, therefore, requires an ethics of weakness, which rejects the discourse of impact and power to enable a politics of art containing the permanence of reflection, the unreliability of thought, and the emergence of form as the event of the new. With a meticulously studied and well-argued case about the “powerlessness of art,” Art of Diremption will be an important contribution to the field of art, aesthetics, and philosophy.
Table of Contents
Introduction
Kant I
Kant II: Disinterestedness and sensus communis
The Sublime: Kant and Schiller
Stendhal and the Promise of Joy
Nietzsche I
Excursus I: On Semblance
Nietzsche II
Hegel: Decision, Diremption, Freedom
Art after the End of Art
Excursus II Radicality and Community
Producing Truth: Morality
As Though / Propositional Content / Morality
Aesthetics and Interest
Aesthetic Difference / Experience / Ethics
The Politics of Art
Kant I
Kant II: Disinterestedness and sensus communis
The Sublime: Kant and Schiller
Stendhal and the Promise of Joy
Nietzsche I
Excursus I: On Semblance
Nietzsche II
Hegel: Decision, Diremption, Freedom
Art after the End of Art
Excursus II Radicality and Community
Producing Truth: Morality
As Though / Propositional Content / Morality
Aesthetics and Interest
Aesthetic Difference / Experience / Ethics
The Politics of Art
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