Drawing the Line: What to Do with the Work of Immoral Artists from Museums to the Movies
Autor Erich Hatala Matthesen Limba Engleză Paperback – 18 feb 2025
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Oxford University Press – 18 feb 2025 | 144.69 lei 3-5 săpt. | |
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780197798126
ISBN-10: 0197798128
Pagini: 184
Dimensiuni: 129 x 179 x 10 mm
Greutate: 0.17 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0197798128
Pagini: 184
Dimensiuni: 129 x 179 x 10 mm
Greutate: 0.17 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
Engaging, personal and limpid, the book is a delight to read. Matthes proves himself to be not only a clear communicator of sometimes intricate ideas, but a deft one too. The text ripples with vivid examples, offbeat quips, instructive metaphors and personal reflections, which animate the problems it covers...The book is a gourmet hamburger: rich, yet down-to-earth, and unlikely to benefit from my unsolicited garnish of saffron and truffle oil. I encourage anyone vexed by immoral artists to tuck in.
Matthes argues that we can recognize that a work of art has been worsened by the immorality of its creator, even to the point that we can no longer personally enjoy it, while accepting that others can still find it appealing.
Hatala Matthes is thorough, nuanced and thoughtful throughoutâ Drawing the Line is a clear, lively exploration of an extremely important issue. It doesnât aim to be definitive, but it left me wanting more. It also made me want to sit down with a glass of wine and re-watch Love and Death.
Erich Hatala Matthes's Drawing the Line offers guidance on the current 'cancel culture' controversies: how should we assess artworks by flawed human beings like Gauguin, J.K. Rowling, Woody Allen, and others? Matthes's nuanced advice is that we should separate the artist from the art and distinguish private from public reactions, while accepting that we may remain emotionally conflicted about works that we particularly treasure. Drawing the Line is anengaging and conversational book that offers plain-spoken insights drawn from the best recent work in aesthetics and moral theory.
Erich Hatala Matthes' wonderful book is both beautifully clear and at the same time quite subtle. Matthes goes beyond public hand-wringing over 'cancel culture' and 'no-platforming' to dive into more difficult (and ultimately more interesting) problems, including the nature of complicity, artistic value, moral responsibility, trust and betrayal, and much more. This short book goes a long way towards making the case that it is important to think carefully about morality, art, and artists.
In Drawing the Line Erich Matthes takes us on a vivid and fun journey through the fascinating and thorny issues at the intersection of aesthetics and morality: Is it ok to laugh at offensive jokes? Is it wrong to enjoy the works of immoral artists? Drawing the Line illustrates how easy it is to get confused about these issues and helps us make up our minds. In doing so, it embodies the power of good philosophy to be culturally relevant and confirms the necessity of clear and detailed thinking on matters of cultural urgency. It is free of pointless jargon, full of instructive examples, and Matthes's expertise in both moral philosophy and aesthetics really shines.
Is it OK to still enjoy the works of problematic artists? Should we boycott them? Should we cancel them? And what the hell does 'canceling' mean, anyway? Erich Matthes' Drawing the Line is a wonderfully accessible, entertaining, and deep response to these questions. It is the opposite of a hot take. Where the cultural discourse tends to hand-wave and mush together a hundred different issues, Matthes offers us nuance and care. Drawing the Line shows how many really distinctive issues are in play. It disentangles them for us, and shows how incredibly different and complicated the answers can get. And it actually does real work to help us figure out how to navigate our way through the mess.
In his approachable integration of aesthetic and ethical principles with real-world examples, Matthes feels like a friend talking you through different angles on a problem that's been bothering you for years." Nandini Pandey, Los Angeles Review of Books
Matthes argues that we can recognize that a work of art has been worsened by the immorality of its creator, even to the point that we can no longer personally enjoy it, while accepting that others can still find it appealing.
Hatala Matthes is thorough, nuanced and thoughtful throughoutâ Drawing the Line is a clear, lively exploration of an extremely important issue. It doesnât aim to be definitive, but it left me wanting more. It also made me want to sit down with a glass of wine and re-watch Love and Death.
Erich Hatala Matthes's Drawing the Line offers guidance on the current 'cancel culture' controversies: how should we assess artworks by flawed human beings like Gauguin, J.K. Rowling, Woody Allen, and others? Matthes's nuanced advice is that we should separate the artist from the art and distinguish private from public reactions, while accepting that we may remain emotionally conflicted about works that we particularly treasure. Drawing the Line is anengaging and conversational book that offers plain-spoken insights drawn from the best recent work in aesthetics and moral theory.
Erich Hatala Matthes' wonderful book is both beautifully clear and at the same time quite subtle. Matthes goes beyond public hand-wringing over 'cancel culture' and 'no-platforming' to dive into more difficult (and ultimately more interesting) problems, including the nature of complicity, artistic value, moral responsibility, trust and betrayal, and much more. This short book goes a long way towards making the case that it is important to think carefully about morality, art, and artists.
In Drawing the Line Erich Matthes takes us on a vivid and fun journey through the fascinating and thorny issues at the intersection of aesthetics and morality: Is it ok to laugh at offensive jokes? Is it wrong to enjoy the works of immoral artists? Drawing the Line illustrates how easy it is to get confused about these issues and helps us make up our minds. In doing so, it embodies the power of good philosophy to be culturally relevant and confirms the necessity of clear and detailed thinking on matters of cultural urgency. It is free of pointless jargon, full of instructive examples, and Matthes's expertise in both moral philosophy and aesthetics really shines.
Is it OK to still enjoy the works of problematic artists? Should we boycott them? Should we cancel them? And what the hell does 'canceling' mean, anyway? Erich Matthes' Drawing the Line is a wonderfully accessible, entertaining, and deep response to these questions. It is the opposite of a hot take. Where the cultural discourse tends to hand-wave and mush together a hundred different issues, Matthes offers us nuance and care. Drawing the Line shows how many really distinctive issues are in play. It disentangles them for us, and shows how incredibly different and complicated the answers can get. And it actually does real work to help us figure out how to navigate our way through the mess.
In his approachable integration of aesthetic and ethical principles with real-world examples, Matthes feels like a friend talking you through different angles on a problem that's been bothering you for years." Nandini Pandey, Los Angeles Review of Books
Notă biografică
Erich Hatala Matthes is an Associate Professor and Chair of the Philosophy Department and Advisory Faculty for Environmental Studies at Wellesley College. His second book is What to Save and Why: Identity, Authenticity, and the Ethics of Conservation(Oxford, 2024).