Aesthetic Democracy

Couverture
Stanford University Press, 2006 - 185 pages
Aesthetic Democracy argues that art and the aesthetic in general are the founding condition of the possibility of establishing social and political democracy. The book examines contemporary criticism and finds that it is historically shaped by colonialism, and that it sets up an opposition of east and west that shapes all contemporary cultural politics. The author argues for a way of outwitting this potentially dangerous struggle of east and west grounded in an aestheticism and a validation of sensory experience. Docherty proposes a new model of cultural critique, based on a revitalized and positively valorized notion of "hypocrisy," whose roots lie in Machiavelli, but whose contemporary strength lies in its potential for an ethical encounter with alterity as such.

 

Table des matières

On Prejudice and Foretelling
3
On Urgency and Emergency
19
Declining the West
42
Aesthetic Education and the Demise
61
The Passion of the Possible
78
Potential European Democracy
89
The Ethics of Hypocrisy III
111
Machiavelli and Modernity
129
Aesthetic Democracy
149
Notes
161
Index 183
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À propos de l'auteur (2006)

Thomas Docherty is Professor of English and Comparative Literature at the University of Warwick.

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