ABSTRACT

In this unprecedented collection, over twenty of the world's most prominent thinkers on the subject including Arthur Danto, Stephen Melville, Wendy Steiner, Alexander Nehamas, and Jay Bernstein ponder the disconnect between these two disciplines. The volume has a radically innovative structure: it begins with introductions, and centres on an animated conversation among ten historians and aestheticians. That conversation was then sent to twenty scholars for commentary and their responses are very diverse: some are informal letters and others full essays with footnotes. Some think they have the answer in hand, and others raise yet more questions. The volume ends with two synoptic essays, one by a prominent aesthetician and the other by a literary critic.

This stimulating inaugural volume in the Routledge The Art Seminar series presents not one but many answers to the question; Does philosophy have anything to say to art history?

part 1|17 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|16 pages

The Border of the Aesthetic

part 2|30 pages

Starting Points

part 3|39 pages

The Art Seminar

part 4|148 pages

Assessments

chapter 7|6 pages

Overcoming Postmodernism

chapter 7|1 pages

Dead and Deader

chapter 8|3 pages

Art History and Aesthetics

chapter 9|4 pages

Art History Versus Aesthetics

chapter 12|2 pages

Toward Rapprochement

chapter 15|16 pages

Beauty and Politics

chapter 18|3 pages

Eavesdropping

chapter 22|9 pages

Why Kant Got It Right

chapter 23|4 pages

Art's Call for Aesthetic Theory

chapter 29|3 pages

Warhol's “Wow!”

chapter 30|4 pages

Ideas and Contexts in Art History

chapter 32|19 pages

Reckoning with Kant

part 5|51 pages

Afterwords

chapter 35|22 pages

Island Mysteries