1st Edition

Reason and Controversy in the Arts

Edited By Mortimer R. Kadish Copyright 1970
    296 Pages
    by Routledge

    293 Pages
    by Routledge

    This study is a fresh and original attempt to liberate the theory of criticism from the limitations of connoisseurship, and the assumptions of aesthetics from the difficulties and paradoxes of aesthetic relativism. It presents a picture of what rationality in the assessment of the arts would be like if one were expected to justify one's decisions in and about the arts.

    Kadish focuses upon the way in which competent and reasonable people express their differences, not upon the way they instruct novices. Among good critics, the author proposes, differences are not managed as differences concerning matters of taste, nor would anyone presume otherwise were it not for a prior and gratuitous choice of a context of consumption for considering the arts. The author examines the hypothesis that differences of opinion in artistically relevant controversy are in a fundamental sense practical, that when critics of the arts differ seriously, proposals for the proper conduct of the arts and a procedure for interpretation of the arts are what is at issue.

    To understand the special logic of controversy in the arts Kadish compares that controversy with legally relevant and scientifically relevant controversies. Finally, the arts and criticism are found to be parts of a coherent enterprise the criteria of which are generated in an evolving practice, as are the criteria of law. This illuminating discourse is of continuing relevance to those interested in aesthetics.

    1: Introductory: The Gist of the Proposal; 2: The Doctrine of the Work of Art Itself; 3: Toward the Poem in Proper Relation; 4: Constructing Critical Objects: The Construction Argument; 5: The Relevance of the Created Object; 6: The Claims Question and the Dogma of Estheticism; 7: Consumer Claims and Artistically Relevant Claims; 8: Judgment and Artistic Merit; 9: The Ideal of Unicity, Judgment, and the Adjudicative Process; 10: How Artistically Relevant Controversy Is Possible: The Structure of Proper Occasions; 11: The Structure of the Evidence; 12: Reason in the Arts: A Concluding Portrait

    Biography

    Mortimer R. Kadish