In The Marriage of Aesthetics and Ethics, fifteen authors reflect on the nature of friendship and love and on the complex relation between art and morality. Karl Verstrynge, Vincent Caudron, Anne Christine Habbard, and Walter Jaeschke draw from authors from Aristotle to Derrida, Montaigne to
The Marriage of Aesthetics and Ethics
- Publisher
- Brill
- Year
- 2015
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 313
- Series
- Critical Studies in German Idealism; 15
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
In The Marriage of Aesthetics and Ethics, fifteen authors reflect on the nature of friendship and love and on the complex relation between art and morality.
Karl Verstrynge, Vincent Caudron, Anne Christine Habbard, and Walter Jaeschke draw from authors from Aristotle to Derrida, Montaigne to Kierkegaard, and Hegel to Blanchot to discuss friendship and love. Andreas Arndt, Paul Cobben, Paul Cruysberghs, Gerbert Faure, Simon Truwant, and Margherita Tonon focus on the connection between aesthetics and ethics in the works of Kant, Schiller, Hegel, Schleiermacher, Kierkegaard, Cassirer, and Adorno. Baldine Saint Girons, StΓ©phane Symons, Marlies De Munck, Stijn De Cauwer, and Willem Styfhals explore the connection between ethical and aesthetic issues in photography, film, music, literature, and the visual arts.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Copying and the limits of substitutability / Dieter Birnbacher -- Deep copy culture / Mark Alfino -- Imitation and replication of technologies : the prospects for an evolutionary ethics of copying / Wybo Houkes -- What is the object in which copyright can subsist? An ontological analysis / Maria Eli
undefined
undefined
The Aesthetics and Ethics of Copying responds to the rapidly changing attitudes towards the use of anotherβs ideas, styles, and artworks. With advances in technology making the copying of artworks and other artefacts exponentially easier, questions of copying no longer focus on the problems of forge
This book explores the relationship between literature and ethics, showing how literature and art work to open up a part of ethics that resists traditional philosophy. Focusing on three American Romantic texts--Wieland, "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow," and The Marble Faun--Robert Hughes demonstrates h