The Sublime in Modern Philosophy : Aesthetics, Ethics, and Nature / Emily Brady.
Material type: TextPublisher: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2013Description: 1 online resource (240 pages) : digital, PDF file(s)Content type:- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9781139018098 (ebook)
- 111/.85 23
- BH301.S7 B73 2013
Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 04 Apr 2016).
In The Sublime in Modern Philosophy: Aesthetics, Ethics, and Nature, Emily Brady takes a fresh look at the sublime and shows why it endures as a meaningful concept in contemporary philosophy. In a reassessment of historical approaches, the first part of the book identifies the scope and value of the sublime in eighteenth-century philosophy (with a focus on Kant), nineteenth-century philosophy and Romanticism, and early wilderness aesthetics. The second part examines the sublime's contemporary significance through its relationship to the arts; its position with respect to other aesthetic categories involving mixed or negative emotions, such as tragedy; and its place in environmental aesthetics and ethics. Far from being an outmoded concept, Brady argues that the sublime is a distinctive aesthetic category which reveals an important, if sometimes challenging, aesthetic-moral relationship with the natural world.
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