Toward an Aesthetics of Blindness: An Interdisciplinary Response to Synge, Yeats, and Friel

Couverture
Peter Lang, 2007 - 331 pages
Blindness has always fascinated those who can see. Although modern imaginative portrayals of the sightless experience are increasingly positive, the affirmative elements of these renderings are inevitably tempered and problematized by the visual predilections of the artists undertaking them. This book explores a variety of the (dis)continuities between depictions of the sightless experience of beauty by sighted artists and the lived aesthetic experiences of blind people. It does so by pressing a radical interdisciplinary reinterpretation of celebrated dramatic portrayals of blindness into service as a tool with which to probe the boundaries of the capacities of the sighted imagination while exploring the sensory detriment of our visually fixated notions of beauty. Works by J. M. Synge, W. B. Yeats, and Brian Friel are explored as a means of crafting a workable and innovative medium of theoretical and experiential exchange between the disciplines of literature, aesthetics, and disability studies. In addition to appraising previously unexamined aspects of the work of three of Ireland's most celebrated modern dramatists, this book considers the consequences for blind people of the exclusionary and prohibitive elements of traditional aesthetic theory and art education. The insights yielded will be of value to those with an interest in modern literature, differential aesthetics, visual culture, perception, and the experience of blindness.
 

Table des matières

Introduction
1
Chapter
13
Chapter Three
15
Blindness without Metaphor Beauty
21
Isolating the Aesthetic Significance of Blindness
28
Why the Question of Reality Does Not Arise
37
Chapter
47
The Critical Misapplication of Theoretical Concerns
54
The Subjection
158
The Enlisting of Unearthed Reserves
165
Do Sanctionings of Subjectivity Lead to Trivializations of
171
The Pervasiveness of a Repetition Compulsion
179
Chapter Five
195
Some Psychological Features of an Aesthetics of Blindness
203
Chapter
213
Experiential and Discursive Familiarity with
227

The Case of a Rivalling NonVisual Aesthetic
62
The Fiddlers Take on the Aesthetics of Blindness
74
The Reasoning Behind the Refusal of Vision
83
Apertures of Memory in Yeatss
95
Beauty as a LightReport on that Womans Remembered Countenance
104
Resemblance and the Aesthetic Moment
116
Blindness as a Means to Effecting a Defamiliarization of the Visual
123
Chapter Four
131
Perception Mediation and the Acquisition
142
Aesthetic Order
236
Progressively Blind People and the Residue of Visual Criteria
243
The Pains of Adaptation
255
Psychical Distance and Foggy Vision
261
Chapter Seven
273
Works Cited
301
Index
315
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À propos de l'auteur (2007)

The Author: David Feeney received a B.A. in English and philosophy from Trinity College Dublin. After a year as a visiting researcher in the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki and a period as a disability scholar with the National Disability Authority of Ireland, Feeney completed a Ph.D. in the English Department at Trinity College Dublin focusing on English literature, disability studies, and aesthetics.

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