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This work is a basic introduction to aesthetics and covers the major theories of art, while referring to various filmic examples to illustrate the complex ideas related to the philosophy of art. In addition, it addresses film itself as an art form, analyzes film studies, and discusses film's ambiguous cultural/artistic position.The overarching theme of the book is the most basic aesthetic question: What is art? That eternal and critical question is explored by addressing representation, formalism, and expressivism, three classic aesthetic theories. Film, Art, and Filmart begins by focusing on Plato, including a look at the issue of censorship as it is raised in his Republic. Then formalism is discussed via Kant, and Roger Fry's and Clive Bell's theory of Significant Form. Expressivism is dealt with by utilizing views by Leo Tolstoy and R.G. Collingwood. Contemporary issues in aesthetics are illuminated with George Dickie's theory of art, while also examining the cognitive theories of Nelson Goodman and Martha Nussbaum. The final chapter opens definitional structure up a bit by investigating the concept of freedom as integral to art and by straying from the largely analytic focus of the rest of the book through analysis of continental philosophers, such as Hegel, Nietzsche, and Foucault.
Michael D. Dahnke is clinical Assistant Professor of health and society programs at Drexel University and Adjunct Professor of Philosophy at St. Joseph's University and The College of New Jersey.
Part 1 PrefaceChapter 2 Introduction: What is Art?Chapter 3 Art as RepresentationChapter 4 Plato and CensorshipChapter 5 Plato: Art as MimesisChapter 6 Social RealismChapter 7 Art as FormChapter 8 KantChapter 9 Significant FormChapter 10 Problems with Significant FormChapter 11 Realism and Formalism in Film TheoryChapter 12 Formalism and Realism in PracticeChapter 13 Formalism, Realism, and the "Real" WorldChapter 14 Art as ExpressionChapter 15 TolstoyChapter 16 R.G. CollingwoodChapter 17 Problems with ExpressivismChapter 18 Art as an InsitutionChapter 19 George Dickie's New ApproachChapter 20 Problems with Institutional TheoryChapter 21 Art as KnowledgeChapter 22 Goodman's CognitivismChapter 23 Nussbaum and Moral KnowledgeChapter 24 Problems with CognitivismChapter 25 ConclusionsChapter 26 A Brief Excursus on High/Low ArtChapter 27 Art as FreedomChapter 28 Art and Freedom: The Enlightenment to 1900Chapter 29 Kant: Art and Creative GeniusChapter 30 Hegel: The Art of ConsciousnessChapter 31 Nietzsche: Art as a LieChapter 32 Foucault: Aesthetics of ExistencePart 33 FilmographyPart 34 Bibliography