Investigations Into the Phenomenology and the Ontology of the Work of Art What are Artworks and How Do We Experience Them? /

This book investigates the nature of aesthetic experience and aesthetic objects. Written by leading philosophers, psychologists, literary scholars and semioticians, the book addresses two intertwined issues. The first is related to the phenomenology of aesthetic experience: The understanding of how...

Πλήρης περιγραφή

Λεπτομέρειες βιβλιογραφικής εγγραφής
Συγγραφή απο Οργανισμό/Αρχή: SpringerLink (Online service)
Άλλοι συγγραφείς: Bundgaard, Peer F. (Επιμελητής έκδοσης), Stjernfelt, Frederik (Επιμελητής έκδοσης)
Μορφή: Ηλεκτρονική πηγή Ηλ. βιβλίο
Γλώσσα:English
Έκδοση: Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, 2015.
Σειρά:Contributions To Phenomenology, In Cooperation with The Center for Advanced Research in Phenomenology, 81
Θέματα:
Διαθέσιμο Online:Full Text via HEAL-Link
Πίνακας περιεχομένων:
  • Introduction: Peer F. Bundgaard
  • Temporal aspects of literary reading; David S. Miall
  • Memory and mental states in the appreciation of literature; Marisa Bortolussi and Peter Dixon
  • Temporal conflict in the reading experience; Cathrine Kietz
  • The aesthetic experience with visual art “at first glance”; Paul J. Locher
  • What is a surface? In the real world? And pictures?; John M. Kennedy and Marta Wnuczko
  • The idiosyncrasy of beauty: Aesthetic universals and the diversity of taste; Patrick Colm Hogan
  • Why we are not all novelists; Shaun Gallagher
  • Aesthetic relationship, cognition, and the pleasures of art; Jean-Marie Schaeffer
  • More seeing-in: surface seeing, design seeing, and meaning seeing in pictures; Peer F. Bundgaard
  • Depiction; John Hyman
  • Green war banners in central Copenhagen: A recent political struggle over interpretation — and some implications for art interpretation as such; Frederik Stjernfelt
  • The appropriation of the work of art as a semiotic act; Francis Édeline and Jean-Marie Klinkenberg
  • Sculpture, diagram, and language in the artwork of Joseph Beuys; Wolfgang Wildgen. Index.