AESTHETIC I I
- Academic year
- 2019/2020 Syllabus of previous years
- Official course title
- ESTETICA II
- Course code
- FT0281 (AF:315416 AR:168928)
- Modality
- On campus classes
- ECTS credits
- 6
- Degree level
- Bachelor's Degree Programme
- Educational sector code
- M-FIL/04
- Period
- 4th Term
- Course year
- 2
- Moodle
- Go to Moodle page
Contribution of the course to the overall degree programme goals
Expected learning outcomes
Applying knowledge and understanding: As a further goal, students should achieve the capacity to explore and delve into secondary literature, as well as reconstructing philosophical debates about a topic or an author.
Making judgments: The course is expected to provide some basic tools for a critical reconstruction of the different positions within aesthetics debates, based on a critical, although not reductive engagement with reference to alternative interpretations.
By the end of the course, students should be able to expose their analysis of the considered literature with clarity and convenient arguments both through oral presentations and by means of a short essay.
Pre-requirements
Contents
First of all, we will return to the theme of the so-called "aesthetic culture", considering alternative interpretations to Gadamer's reading of it (Marcuse and Porter) and we will proceed by treating Kant's, Schiller's, Hegel's aesthetic approaches in details by reading and discussing some of the most interesting contemporary contributions on these authors (from Paul Gruyer to Dieter Henrich and Rachel Zuckert on Kant, from Heidegger and Pareyson on Schiller, from Gethman-Siefert to Pinkard and Pippin on Hegel).
In this way, the course is meant to offer a first training in specialized research, with student presentations, seminar readings, research on secondary literature and writing of a short essay.
Referral texts
In order to write the essay on which they will be evaluated, students are requested to establish a selection of the texts indicated below with the teachers.
On the Historicity of the Concept of "Art" and Aesthetic Culture:
• Kristeller, P.O. (2006), Il sistema moderno delle arti, Firenze: Alinea.
• Marcuse, H. (1968), La dimensione estetica, in Eros e civiltà, Torino: Einaudi, pp.194-214.
• Porter, I.J. (2003), Why Art Has Never Been Autonomous, Arethusa, 43/2, pp.165-180.
• Shiner, L. (2010), L’invenzione dell’arte, Torino: Einaudi.
• Shiner, L. (2009), Continuity and Discontinuity in the Concept of Art, British Journal of Aesthetics, 49.
On Kant:
• Feloj S. (2018), Normatività e sapere estetico, Mimesis.
• Haskins C. (1989), Kant and the Autonomy of Art, The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism, 47/1, pp.43-54.
• Henrich D. (1992), Kant’s Explanation of Aesthetic Judgment, in Aesthetic Judgment and the Moral Image of the World, Standford: Standford U.P., pp. 29-56.
• Guyer P. (1978), Desinterestedness and Desire in Kant’s Aesthetics, The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism, 36/4, pp.449-460.
• Guyer P. (1994), Kant’s Conception of Fine Art, The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism, 52/3, pp.275-285.
• Proulx J. (2011), Nature, Judgment and Art: Kant anf the Problem of Genius, Kant Studies on line, 31, pp.27-53.
• Zuckert R. (2006), The Purposiveness of Form: A Reading’s of Kant’s Aesthetics, Journal of the History of Philosophy, 44/4, pp.599-622.
• Zuckert R. (2002), A New Look at Kant’s Theory of Pleasure, The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism, 3/2002, pp.239-252.
On Schiller:
• Ardovino Adriano, Il sensibile e il razionale. Schiller e la mediazione estetica Aesthetics Preprint, 2001
• Heidegger M. (2008), Introduzione all’estetica. Le Lettere sull’educazione estetica dell’uomo di Schiller, Roma: Carocci.
• Michielon, L. (2002), Il gioco delle facoltà in Schiller, Il Poligrafo.
• Pareyson Luigi, Etica ed estetica in Schiller, Milano, Mursia, 1983.
• Tomasi G. (2013), Schiller, Kant e l’oggettività della bellezza, in Siani-Tomasi (a cura di), Schiller lettore di Kant, Pisa: ETS Edizioni, pp.67-89.
On Hegel:
• Caramelli, E. (2015), Eredità del sensibile. La proposizione speculativa nella Fenomenologia dello spirito di Hegel, Il Mulino, Bologna.
Danto, A.C. (1998), The End of Art: A Phiosophical Defence, History and Theory.
• Gadamer H.G. (2002), Fine dell’arte?, in Scritti di estetica, Palermo: Aesthetica, pp. 41-55.
• Garelli G. (2014), L’estetica nella fenomenologia dello spirito, in Farina-Siani (a cura di), L’estetica di Hegel, Bologna: il Mulino, pp.49-66.
• Gethmann Siefert A.M. (2014), Nuove fonti e nuove interpretazioni nell’estetica di Hegel, in Farina-Siani (a cura di), L’estetica di Hegel, Bologna: il Mulino, pp.13-31.
• Pinkard T. (2007), Symbolic, Classic and Romantic Art, in Houlgate S. (a cura di), Hegel and the Arts, Evanston: Northern Illinois UP, pp.3-28.
• Pippin R. (2008), The Absence of Aesthetics in Hegel’s Aesthetics, Bieser F.C. (a cura di), The Cambridge Companion to Hegel and Nineteenth-Century Philosophy, Cambridge: Cambridge UP, pp.394-418.
Assessment methods
Each student must present one of the articles or a book section to be chosen from those listed in the bibliography, possibly within the course or during his oral examination, in case the first option should not be possible. Students are also requested to write a short essay of 6/7 folders on one of the authors or topics covered by the lessons, relying on an agreement with the teacher. The essay should not comprehend the text that is the subject of one’s own oral presentation.
Teaching methods
Teaching language
Further information
Type of exam
2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development Goals
This subject deals with topics related to the macro-area "Human capital, health, education" and contributes to the achievement of one or more goals of U. N. Agenda for Sustainable Development