dc.description.abstract |
Recent academic writing emphasises the importance of the body in human meaning
and understanding but, surprisingly, a high percentage of researchers turn a blind
eye to the fact that the Western philosophical aesthetic tradition played a leading
role in this regard. This article aims to contribute to the reinstatement of the
body to its rightful place in historic Western philosophy and art practice. The
article thus analyses how the Western aesthetic and artistic tradition started out
by attempting to conceptualise and actualise a humanist body in art, but ended up
deconstructing such a notion and setting up a metaphorical aesthetic body in its
place. In my estimation such a metaphorical perspective of the body in art is not only
an emancipatory achievement, but also a joyous affirmation of the human capacity
for never-ending creativity. |
en |