2010 Course Handbook
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PHL250: Aesthetics
What is art? Can art provide us with knowledge, and what sort of knowledge would that be? Can art transform our experience of the world? What role does art play in modern society? Aesthetics inquires into the nature of art and the significance of aesthetic experience for our understanding of the world. In this unit we begin with the core aesthetic problems of beauty and pleasure, and examine whether taste is merely subjective or in some sense objective. We then look at the idea that art is a way in which a culture expresses its understanding of nature, reality and the self. We also consider the controversial idea famously articulated by Hegel, that art in modernity has reached its end, and explore contemporary philosophical responses to the modern crisis in art. Finally we turn to more recent debates in aesthetic theory looking at what the relationship between art and philosophy should be, and whether art can provide alternative ways of defining knowledge and experience in modern culture. These philosophical theories are examined in conjunction with a discussion of contemporary artists and art works in a variety of media from painting and photography to music, film, and digital art.
| Credit Points: | 3 |
| Contact Hours: | 3 |
| When Offered: | 2011 - Next offered in 2011 |
| Staff Contact(s): | Dr Robert Sinnerbrink |
| Prerequisites: |
12cp or admission to GDipPhil |
| Corequisites: | |
| NCCW(s): | PHIL250 |
| Unit Designation(s): | |
| Assessed As: | Graded |
| Offered By: | Department of Philosophy |
Timetable Information
For unit timetable information please visit the Timetables@Macquarie Website .
