Results for 'Death in art'

979 found
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  1.  18
    Ageing, Aura, and Vanitas in Art: Greek Laughter and Death.Babette Babich - 2023 - Espes. The Slovak Journal of Aesthetics 12 (2):56-86.
    Beginning with the representation of age in extremis in the nature morte or still life, a depiction of aged artifacts and representations of vanitas, artistic representations particularly in painting associate woman and death. Looking at artistic allegories for age and ageing, raising the question of aura for Walter Benjamin along with Ivan Illich and David Hume, this essay reflects on Heidegger on history together with reflections on the ‘death of art’ as well as Arakawa and Gins and Bazon (...)
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  2.  21
    Death by Art; Or, "Some Men Kill You with a Six-Gun, Some Men with a Pen".John Gardner - 1977 - Critical Inquiry 3 (4):741-771.
    My object here is to try to make the idea of moral criticism, and its foundation, moral art, sound at least a trifle less outrageous than it does at present. I'd like to explain why moral criticism is necessary and, in a democracy, essential; how it came about that the idea of moral criticism is generally hoo-hooed or spat upon by people who in other respects seem moderately intelligent and civil human beings; and that the right kind of moral criticism (...)
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  3. After the Death of Art for Hegel and Nietzsche in advance.Ethan Linehan - forthcoming - Epoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy.
    In this paper, I take a critical angle on the supposed “death of art” literature by challenging its conclusions on what the death of art portends for both Hegel and Nietzsche. I posit that in the wake of Hegel’s observation of art’s diminished role and against Nietzsche’s lamentation of this loss, art remains both indispensable and insufficient for addressing the profound contradictions of contemporary life. I argue that, while art cannot reclaim its historical centrality or resolve the existential (...)
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  4. Art After the Death of Art in On the Stanislaw Ignacy Witkiewicz Centenary.A. Sandauer - 1985 - Dialectics and Humanism 12 (2).
     
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  5. Subjective destitution in art and politics: From being-towards-death to undeadness.Slavoj Žižek - 2023 - Enrahonar: Quaderns de Filosofía 70:69-81.
    Jacques Lacan coined the term “subjective destitution” to describe the concluding moment of a psychoanalytic treatment. This concept can also usefully be applied to art and to politics. In art, subjective destitution can be defined as a passage from being-towardsdeath to undeadness, in other words to the position of the living dead – this passage takes place between Shostakovich’s 14th symphony and his final symphony, the 15th. In politics, subjective destitution designates the passage of a political subject to a radical (...)
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  6. Going to Meet Death: The Art of Dying in the Early Part of the Twenty-First Century.John Hardwig - 2009 - Hastings Center Report 39 (4):37-45.
    Better public health and medicine have given us a new kind of death and with it, a new fear – the fear that death will come too late and take too long. The generation that is dying now is largely unprepared for this new kind of death, for traditionally, people have always tried to avoid or postpone death. But if we are to avoid a bad death – too slow and too late – many of (...)
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  7.  17
    Medieval Bodies: Life, Death and Art in the Middle Ages by Jack Hartnell.Nicholas Furton - 2020 - The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly 20 (1):188-191.
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  8.  80
    On the death of art in Hegel's lectures on aesthetics.Juan Sebastián Ballén Rodríguez - 2012 - Universitas Philosophica 29 (59):179-194.
  9.  46
    Deaths in Venice: The Cases of Gustav von Aschenbach by Philip Kitcher.Iris Vidmar - 2016 - Philosophy and Literature 40 (1):320-324.
    From philosophy of science, epistemology, and ethics to political philosophy and philosophy of mathematics, Philip Kitcher has made outstanding contributions to every philosophical discipline. With Deaths in Venice: The Cases of Gustav von Aschenbach, he continues his journey into philosophy of literature he undertook back in 2007 with his book Joyce’s Kaleidoscope. Written in his clear, precise, and occasionally almost poetic style, Deaths in Venice is not only an inspiring new interpretation of Thomas Mann’s famous novel Death in Venice (...)
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  10.  25
    Eros and Thanatos: Images of Life and Death in Contemporary Art.Curtis Carter - unknown
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  11.  69
    The Death of Art.Thomas Tam - 2005 - Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 26 (1):161-172.
    Bataille published two monographs on painting in 1955: one on Lascaux, the other on Manet. The text on Lascaux bears the subtitle The Birth of Art, and it would be natural to think that, as Steven Ungar suggests, Manet represented for Bataille “the birth of a modernist painting.” No doubt Manet’s importance comes from the fact that he, more than any of his contemporaries, was the first to break decidedly with traditional painting and thus inaugurated a new era of art. (...)
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  12. Appendix on Croce's Conception of the “Death of Art” in Hegel'.Bernard Bosanquet - 1919 - Proceedings of the British Academy 9:280-88.
     
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  13.  13
    How Many Times Can One Die? The Death of Art.Magdalena Wołek - 2022 - Ruch Filozoficzny 78 (3):103-123.
    This article deals with the problem of death and the end of art. The discourse on the subject is still ongoing only due to the authority of Hegel, several contemporary authors and above all – this is my main thesis – a metaphorical projection inscribed in our language and the concept of art itself. This allows us to perceive organic features in art, thus contributing to the ease with which one can formulate a thesis on end or death. (...)
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  14.  17
    8. Beyond the Death of Art: Community and the Ecology of the Self.Thomas M. Alexander - 1997 - In Richard E. Hart & Douglas R. Anderson, Philosophy in experience: American philosophy in transition. New York: Fordham University Press. pp. 173-194.
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  15. Deterritorialising Death: Queerfeminist Biophilosophy and Ecologies of the Non/Living in Contemporary Art.Marietta Radomska - 2020 - Australian Feminist Studies 35 (104).
    In the contemporary context of environmental crises and the degradation of resources, certain habitats become unliveable, leading to the death of individuals and species extinction. Whilst bioscience emphasises interdependency and relationality as crucial characteristics of life shared by all organisms, Western cultural imaginaries tend to draw a thick dividing line between humans and nonhumans, particularly evident in the context of death. On the one hand, death appears as a process common to all forms of life; on the (...)
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  16.  14
    Art from death originated.Claes Entzenberg - 2013 - Stockholm: Art and Theory Publishing.
    Every artwork is the first and last of its kind. Nothing happens the same way twice. But if this is the case, then what limits can we impose on our understanding of the historical development of art? The poles in our conceptual schema of the development of art are analogous to human life, which is placed between two poles of non-existence. This schema is used in our understanding of art, interpretation, and metaphor. Being a complex part in the intersection between (...)
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  17.  12
    The power of death: contemporary reflections on death in western society.Maria-José Blanco & Ricarda Vidal (eds.) - 2015 - New York: Berghahn.
    The social and cultural changes of the last century have transformed death from an everyday fact to something hidden from view. Shifting between the practical and the theoretical, the professional and the intimate, the real and the fictitious, this collection of essays explores the continued power of death over our lives. It examines the idea and experience of death from an interdisciplinary perspective, including studies of changing burial customs throughout Europe; an account of a"dying party" in the (...)
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  18. Collision: The Death of Art and the Sunday of Life: Hegel on the Fate of Modern Art.Jason Miller - 2012 - Evental Aesthetics 1 (1):39-47.
    Focusing specifically on Hegels analysis of Dutch genre painting in the Lectures on Aesthetics, Jason Miller argues that Hegel regards modern art not as a failure to convey the deepest interests of a culture or society, but as a welcome liberation of art in which it comes to reflect the diversity and complexity of human experience.
     
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  19.  98
    The Death of Art.Arthur C. Danto - 1984 - Haven Publications.
    The lead essay by Arthur Danto "addresses the possibility that art as it has been enshrined in the museums, galleries, and other canonizing institutions of modern culture has reached an end, that it has nothing more to do or say." The other essays in the book are reactions to the lead essay.
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  20.  27
    John Aberth. From the Brink of the Apocalypse: Confronting Famine, War, Plague, and Death in the Later Middle Ages (London: Routledge, 2010), xxi+ 327 pp.£ 18.99 paper. David B. Allison and Babette Babich, eds. New Nietzsche Studies: Art and Aesthetics. The Journal of the Nietzsche Society (New York: New Nietzsche Studies, 2010), vii+ 219 pp. [REVIEW]Nele Bemong, Pieter Borghart, Michael De Dobbeleer, Kristoffel Demoen & Koen De - 2011 - The European Legacy 16 (6):847-850.
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  21.  26
    Doubt, Disorientation, and Death in the Plague Time.Jamie Lindemann Nelson - 2020 - Hastings Center Report 50 (3):4-4.
    An account of an experience with contracting an illness that may well have been Covid‐19 gives rise to reflections on doubt and on the art of dying well. The upshot: our mortality remains a fundamentally disorienting condition of our existence. If there's any wisdom to be had concerning our deaths, it likely lies in the direction of accepting their deranging character, rather than in searching for the philosophical insight that will reconcile us to our fate.
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  22. The Birth and Death of Beauty in Western Art.Derek Allan - manuscript
    Examines (1) the birth of art-as-beauty in Western art and the concomitant birth of the idea of art itself; (2) the death of art-of-beauty from Manet onwards. Also looks briefly at some major implications for aesthetics (the philosophy of art). Paper includes some relevant reproductions.
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  23.  56
    Justice and Death in Sophocles.L. S. Colchester - 1942 - Classical Quarterly 36 (1-2):21-.
    Regarded aesthetically the Oedipus Coloneus is unsatisfactory. The plot is episodic, consisting of a series of incidents which, except that they involve a single hero, and are derived from the previous history of that hero or his ancestors, are unrelated. That is to say, while Sophocles has in all his other plays combined the two to perfection, he has here given his content precedence over his art. The aim of this paper is to consider one or two aspects of that (...)
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  24.  48
    Enrico De Pascale, Death and Resurrection in Art. Trans., Anthony Shugaar. Los Angeles: J. Paul Getty Museum, 2009. Paper. Pp. 384; color frontispiece and many black-and-white and color figures. $24.95. First published in 2007 under the title Morte e resurrezione by Mondadori Electa, S.p.A., Milan. [REVIEW]Elina Gertsman - 2010 - Speculum 85 (3):662-663.
  25.  70
    Art, Technology, and Trans-Death Options.Reyes Espinoza - 2019 - In Dalila Honorato, María Antοnia González Valerio, Marta De Menez & Andreas Giannakoulopoulos, TABOO ‒ TRANSGRESSION ‒ TRANSCENDENCE in Art & Science 2018. Corfu, Greece: Ionian University Publications. pp. 194-199.
    Death across human history is codified and controlled by religion, dogma, or social￾political circumstances. However, it is possible to take death out of these realms, instead dying how one wishes. One can design their own death. I will argue that human trans-death can be an intentional performance by persons and that this intentional performance can be combined with the newest and most novel methods of preserving a consciousness. This thesis opens possibilities for future exhibitions and live (...)
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  26.  27
    From a Biopolitical ‘Will to Life’ to a Noopolitical Ethos of Death in the Aesthetics of Digital Code.Anna Munster - 2011 - Theory, Culture and Society 28 (6):67-90.
    In a range of digital creative productions and digital culture, questions of how to deal with finitude are on the rise. On the one hand, sectors of the digital entertainment industry – specifically computer games developers – are concerned with the question of how to manage `death' digitally. On the other hand, death and suicide have become the impetus for humorous artistic expression. This article tracks the emergence of a digital ethos that is cognizant of consequence, finitude and (...)
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  27.  33
    “It Is Not Wit, It Is Truth:” Transcending the Narrative Bounds of Professional and Personal Identity in Life and in Art.Michelle L. Elliot - 2016 - Journal of Medical Humanities 37 (3):241-256.
    Taking inspiration from the film Wit (2001), adapted from Margaret Edson’s (1999) Pulitzer Prize-winning play, this article explores the particularities of witnessing a cinematic cancer narrative juxtaposed with the author’s own cancer narrative. The analysis reveals the tenuous line between death and dying, illness and wellness, life and living and the resulting identities shaped in the process of understanding both from a personal and professional lens. By framing these representations of illness experience within the narrative constructions of drama, time, (...)
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  28.  26
    Death and the afterlife in byzantium: The fate of the soul in theology, liturgy, and art by vasileios marinis, cambridge university press, new York, 2017, pp. XV + 202, £75.00, hbk. [REVIEW]Robert Ombres - 2017 - New Blackfriars 98 (1078):759-761.
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  29. The reading of a still: The evocation of death in Dorothy Dandridge's photographs (Black American cinema).C. Regester - 1998 - In Donald Kuspit, Art Criticism. pp. 13--1.
     
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  30. Berel Lang, ed., The Death of Art. [REVIEW]Lars Aagaard-Mogensen - 1986 - Philosophy in Review 6:229-231.
     
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  31. Ecologies of Death, Ecologies of Mourning: A Biophilosophy of Non/Living Arts.Marietta Radomska - 2023 - Research in Arts and Education 2023 (2):7-20.
    In the present condition of planetary environmental crises, violence, and war, entire ecosystems are annihilated, habitats turn into unliveable spaces, and shared “more-than-human” vulnerabilities get amplified. Here and now, death and loss become urgent environmental concerns, while the Anthropocene-induced anxiety, anger, and grief are manifested in popular-scientific narratives, art, culture, and activism. Grounded in the theoretical framework of queer death studies, this article explores present grief imaginaries and engagements with more-than-human death, dying, and extinction, as they are (...)
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  32. Leo Tolstoy’s tragic death and his impacts on Max Weber and György Lukács: On autonomy of arts and science/ O tema da morte trágica de Liev Tolstói e set impacto em Max Weber e György Lukács: Sobre a autonomia nas ciências e na arte.Luis F. Roselino - 2014 - Revista História E Cultura 3 (1):150-171.
    The tragic death in Tolstoy's writings has helped both Max Weber and György Lukács in characterizing the modern pathos as a tragic contemplation of the emptiness of life. Through Tolstoy's readings, Weber and Lukács found an interesting source of denying arts and modern sciences autonomy, considering, from the aesthetics sphere, the meaningless of this new immanent reality. Both has assumed Tolstoy main theme from the same perspective, contrasting ancient and modern worldviews. Max Weber presented this theme in his disenchantment (...)
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  33.  13
    Dying in the twenty-first century: toward a new ethical framework for the art of dying well.Lydia S. Dugdale (ed.) - 2015 - Cambridge, Massachusetts: The MIT Press.
    Physicians, philosophers, and theologians consider how to address death and dying for a diverse population in a secularized century.Most of us are generally ill-equipped for dying. Today, we neither see death nor prepare for it. But this has not always been the case. In the early fifteenth century, the Roman Catholic Church published the Ars moriendi texts, which established prayers and practices for an art of dying. In the twenty-first century, physicians rely on procedures and protocols for the (...)
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  34. The Death of Immortality and the Mystery of Art’s Temporal Transcendence.Derek Allan - manuscript
    It has long been recognised that great art, whether visual art, literature or music, has a special capacity to “live on” – to endure – long after the moment of its creation. Thus, our world of art today includes, for example, ancient Mesopotamian sculpture, Shakespeare’s plays, and the music of medieval times. How does this capacity to endure operate? Or to ask that question another way: what does “endure” mean in the case of art? The Renaissance concluded that art endures (...)
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  35. Art in the time of Disease.Srajana Kaikini - 2014 - Journal for Cancer Research and Therapeutics 10 (1):229 -231.
    An invited editorial on the depiction of disease in art history which would then become the symbol of this redemptive philosophy.
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  36.  25
    “A Matter of Life and Death”: Kawabata on the Value of Art after the Atomic Bombings.Mara Miller - 2014 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 72 (3):261-275.
    This article explores the possible interpretations—and the implications of those interpretations—of a comment about the importance of art made by Yasunari Kawabata (1899–1972), later the first Japanese Nobel laureate for literature: that “looking at old works of art is a matter of life and death.” (In 1949, Kawabata visited Hiroshima in his capacity as president of the Japan literary society P.E.N. to inspect the damage caused by the atomic bombing of Hiroshima that helped end World War II. On his (...)
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  37.  37
    Art of accepting the ‘least bad’ death.Trisha M. Prentice - 2021 - Journal of Medical Ethics 47 (4):225-226.
    That which constitutes a ‘good death’, or dying well, has long been of interest to philosophers and clinicians alike. While difficult to define due to its deeply personal nature and dependency on spiritual and cultural beliefs and past experiences, Wilkinson1 has drawn parallels from art and music to consider key ethical components. Few in clinical practice would dispute that a ‘good death’ is one that does not rob the person of a valuable life, is aligned with the preferences (...)
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  38. Only a Promise of Happiness: The Place of Beauty in a World of Art.Alexander Nehamas - 2007 - Princeton University Press.
    Neither art nor philosophy was kind to beauty during the twentieth century. Much modern art disdains beauty, and many philosophers deeply suspect that beauty merely paints over or distracts us from horrors. Intellectuals consigned the passions of beauty to the margins, replacing them with the anemic and rarefied alternative, "aesthetic pleasure." In Only a Promise of Happiness, Alexander Nehamas reclaims beauty from its critics. He seeks to restore its place in art, to reestablish the connections among art, beauty, and desire, (...)
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  39.  34
    Pedagogy and the Art of Death: Reparative Readings of Death and Dying in Margaret Edson’s Wit.Christine M. Gottlieb - 2018 - Journal of Medical Humanities 39 (3):325-336.
    Wit explores modes of reading representations of death and dying, both through the play’s sustained engagement with Donne’s Holy Sonnets and through Vivian’s self-reflexive approach to her illness and death. I argue that the play dramatizes reparative readings, a term coined by Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick to describe an alternative to the paranoid reading practices that have come to dominate literary criticism. By analyzing the play’s reparative readings of death and dying, I show how Wit provides lessons about (...)
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  40. Hegel's End of Art Revisited: The Death of God and the Essential Finitude of Artistic Beauty.Jeffrey Reid - 2020 - Clio: A Journal of Literature, History, and the Philosophy of History 1 (48):77-101.
    The article re-visits the different scholarly approaches to Hegel's end-of-art scenario, and then proposes a new reading whereby ending and finitude are presented as essential features of beautiful art. The first and most determinant of art's endings is the death of the Christly art object, not representations of Christ, but the actual death of (the son of) God himself as the last classical artwork. The death of God represents the last word in Greco-Roman art, the accomplishment of (...)
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  41.  12
    The Art of Biography in Antiquity by Tomas Hägg (review).Dan Curley - 2013 - American Journal of Philology 134 (4):713-717.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:The Art of Biography in Antiquity by Tomas HäggDan CurleyTomas Hägg. The Art of Biography in Antiquity. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012. xv + 496 pp. Cloth, $110.We know less about the genre of ancient biography than handbooks and brief surveys would have us believe. Genres by their nature invite definition, and historiographical perspectives on this genre in particular promote tidy classifications and clear lines of influence. Tomas (...)
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  42.  38
    God as burden: A theological reflection on art, death and God in the work of Joost Zwagerman.Rein Brouwer - 2017 - HTS Theological Studies 73 (4):1-7.
    In one of his essays on art, Dutch author and essayist Joost Zwagerman reflects on the work of South African artist Marlene Dumas. Zwagerman addresses in particular Dumas' My Mother Before She Became My Mother, painted 3 years after her mother died. In his reflections, Zwagerman proposes an interpretation of Dumas' work. He suggests that Dumas, in her art, does not accept the omnipotence of death. Maybe against better judgement, but Dumas keeps creating images that not only illustrate the (...)
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  43.  89
    Grief, Death, and Longing in Stoic and Christian Ethics.Paul Scherz - 2017 - Journal of Religious Ethics 45 (1):7-28.
    The Stoic rejection of the passion of grief strikes many ethicists writing on dying as inhuman, selfish, or lacking appreciation for the world. This essay argues that Stoics rejected grief and the fear of death because these passions alienated one from the present through sorrow or anxiety for the future, disrupting one's ability to fulfill obligations of care for others and to feel gratitude for the gift of loved ones. Early Christian writers on death, such as Ambrose, maintained (...)
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  44.  39
    The Death of the Sign, The Rise of the Image in Merce Cunningham’s Choreography.Edith Wyschogrod - 1999 - The Proceedings of the Twentieth World Congress of Philosophy 4:219-229.
    It is not the purpose of the present paper to chronicle transformations in the recent history of dance but rather to demonstrate that an art in which the materiality of the body and the localizability of space are critical has nevertheless been engaged in a struggle between sign and image. This struggle cannot be understood without attending to the tensions between the visceral and the virtual, between site specific spatiality and cyberspace. Exploring changes in dance, an art not generally discussed (...)
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  45.  39
    Zen and the Art of Death.Maja Milcinski - 1999 - Journal of the History of Ideas 60 (3):385-397.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Zen and the Art of DeathMaja Milcinski*When reflecting on immortality, longevity, death, and suicide, or taking into consideration some of the central concepts of the Sino-Japanese philosophical tradition, such as impermanence (Chinese: wuchang; Japanese: mujo), we see that the philosophical methods developed in the Graeco-Judeo-Christian tradition might not be very suitable. On the other hand it is instructive to contrast them with the similar themes developed in the (...)
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  46.  16
    Music of the spheres and the dance of death: studies in musical iconology.Kathi Meyer-Baer - 1970 - New York: Da Capo Press.
    The roots and evolution of two concepts usually thought to be Western in origin-musica mundana (the music of the spheres) and musica humana (music's relation to the human soul)-are explored. Beginning with a study of the early creeds of the Near East, Professor Meyer-Baer then traces their development in the works of Plato and the Gnostics, and in the art and literature of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. Previous studies of symbolism in music have tended to focus on a (...)
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  47.  30
    The Art of Plato: Ten Essays in Platonic Interpretation (review).David Sider - 1997 - American Journal of Philology 118 (3):462-465.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:The Art of Plato: Ten Essays in Platonic InterpretationDavid SiderR.B. Rutherford. The Art of Plato: Ten Essays in Platonic Interpretation. Cambridge: Harvard University Press; London: Duckworth, 1995. xv 1 335 pp. Cloth, $45.Richard Rutherford has given himself a difficult task: nothing less than a unified analysis of the form and content of several Platonic dialogues, without—as if this is not challenging enough—“losing sight either of his historical context (...)
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  48.  32
    The Openness of Art. The Poetics of Art and Loss of Autonomy of Art.Polona Tratnik - 2021 - Rivista di Estetica 76:161-180.
    With the concept of the open work, Umberto Eco addressed the poetics to which art turned with modernism. In the article the author analyzes the notion of the open work, the references relevant to this concept and the relations of this concept to similar concepts introduced by other scholars such as Roland Barthes. Scholars discussing the openness of art were deriving primarily from Paul Valéry, and they distanced themselves from the myth of the artist as a genius and from the (...)
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  49.  14
    Essays in Migratory Aesthetics: Cultural Practices Between Migration and Art-making.Sam Durrant & Catherine M. Lord - 2015 - BRILL.
    This volume addresses the impact of human movement on the aesthetic practices that make up the fabric of culture. The essays explore the ways in which cultural activities—ranging from the habitual gestures of the body to the production of specific artworks—register the impact of migration, from the forced transportation of slaves to the New World and of Jews to the death camps to the economic migration of peoples between the West and its erstwhile colonies; from the internal and external (...)
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  50.  21
    Drawing the line: life, death, and ethical choices in an American hospital.Samuel Gorovitz - 1991 - Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
    In Drawing the Line, philosopher Samuel Gorovitz examines the ethical questions that permeate the daily lives of medical professionals: Who should be making life and death decisions? How should scarce medical resources be allocated? What rules should govern the use of fetal tissues in research? Where should we draw the line?The questions are rooted in the author's seven-week observation of events at Boston's Beth Israel hospital. Gorovitz shares with readers an intense, disturbing, and insightful account of operating rooms, intensive (...)
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