Phenomenology and the Arts: Logos and Aisthesis

Phenomenology and the Arts: Logos and Aisthesis
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Artikel-Nr:
9783030308667
Veröffentl:
2020
Einband:
eBook
Seiten:
223
Autor:
Kwok-Ying Lau
Serie:
109, Contributions to Phenomenology
eBook Typ:
PDF
eBook Format:
Reflowable eBook
Kopierschutz:
Digital Watermark [Social-DRM]
Sprache:
Englisch
Beschreibung:

This volume examines the great varieties of artistic experience from first hand phenomenological descriptions. It features detailed and concrete analyses which provides readers with in-depth insights into each specific domain of artistic experience. Coverage includes phenomenological elucidation of the aesthetic attitude, the power of imagination, and the logic of sensibility. The essays also detail concrete phenomenological analyses of aesthetic experiences in poetry, painting, photography, drama, architecture, and urban aesthetics. The book contains essays from "e;Logos and Aisthesis: Phenomenology and the Arts,"e; an international conference held at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. It brings together a team of top scholars from both the East and the West and offers readers a global perspective on this interesting topic. These innovative, yet accessible, essays, will benefit students and researchers in philosophy, aesthetics, the arts, and the humanities. They will also beof interest to specialists in phenomenology.

This volume examines the great varieties of artistic experience from first hand phenomenological descriptions. It features detailed and concrete analyses which provides readers with in-depth insights into each specific domain of artistic experience. Coverage includes phenomenological elucidation of the aesthetic attitude, the power of imagination, and the logic of sensibility. The essays also detail concrete phenomenological analyses of aesthetic experiences in poetry, painting, photography, drama, architecture, and urban aesthetics.

The book contains essays from "Logos and Aisthesis: Phenomenology and the Arts," an international conference held at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. It brings together a team of top scholars from both the East and the West and offers readers a global perspective on this interesting topic. These innovative, yet accessible, essays, will benefit students and researchers in philosophy, aesthetics, the arts, and the humanities. They will also beof interest to specialists in phenomenology.

Part I. Phenomenological Approach to Art.- Chapter 1. Aesthetic Attitude and Phenomenological Attitude: From Zhu Guangqian to Husserl (Kwok-ying Lau).- Chapter 2. An Husserlian Account of the Power of the Imaginary (Thomas Nenon).- Chapter 3. Art and Experience: Reflections on Heidegger’s ‘Origin of the Work of Art’ (Dermot Moran).- Part II. Varieties of Artistic Experience.- Chapter 4. Aisthesis and Logos – One or Two? Two Kindred Poems by Qianlong Di and Goethe (Elmar Holenstein).- Chapter 5. Seeing the Invisible: Kandinsky and the Multi-Dimensionality of Colors (Junichi Murata).- Chapter 6. The Specificity of Medium: Painting and Thinking in Merleau-Ponty’sEye and Mind (Nicolas de Warren).- Chapter 7. Theatre as a Scene of Otherness (Bernhard Waldenfels).- Chapter 8. The Figuration of Time: Rhythm and Metaphor in Dramatic Language (Kwok-Kui Wong).- Chapter 9. Emptiness and the Spiritual in Architecture (Jung-Sun Han Heuer).- Chapter 10. Digital Technology, Urban Aesthetics,and Phenomenology (Jong-Kwan Lee).- Chapter 11. Re-presenting Earthscape: Towards a Phenomenology of Aerial Photographic Art (Chan-Fai Cheung).- Part III. Logic of Sensibility.- Chapter 12. How much Logos is there in Aisthesis? Aristotle’s Phenomenology of Perception (Emmanuel Alloa).- Chapter 13. Seeing and Touching: The Optic and the Haptic in Merleau-Ponty’s Thought (Pierre Rodrigo).- Chapter 14. Toward the Phenomenology of Aesthetic Instinct Developed through a Dialogue with F. Schiller (Nam-In Lee).

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