Sublime Economy: On the intersection of art and economicsJack Amariglio, Joseph W. Childers, Stephen E. Cullenberg Routledge, 2008 M11 25 - 336 páginas Over the last two centuries, artists, critics, philosophers and theorists have contributed significantly to such representations of "the economy" as sublime. It might even be said that much of the emergence of a distinctly "modern" art in the West is inextricably linked to the perception of art’s own autonomy and, therefore, its privileged, mostly critical, gaze at the terrible mixture of wonder and horror of capitalist economic practices and institutions. The premise of this collection is that despite this perceptual sharing, "sublime economy" has yet to be investigated in a purely cross-disciplinary way. Sublime Economy seeks to map this critical territory by exploring the ways diverse concepts of economy and economic value have been culturally constituted and disseminated through modern art and cultural practice. Comprising of 14 individual essays along with an editors’ introduction, Sublime Economy draws together work from some of the leading scholars in the several fields currently exploring the intersection of economic and aesthetic practices and discourses. A pressing issue of this cross-disciplinary conversation is to discern how artists’, writers’, and cultural scholars’ constructions of distinct conceptions of economic value, as pertains to aesthetic objects as well as to more "everyday" objects and relations of mass consumption, have contributed to the ways "value" functions in and across disparate discourses. Thus this book looks at how cultural critics and theorists have put forward working notions of economic value that have regularities and effects similar to those of the "expert" conceptions and discourses about value that have been the preserve of professional economists. |
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... production and distributionof economic conceptsand theories, includingthatof “economic value.”To put this otherwise, the conferencecommenced with the presupposition that, over the span ofatleastthe past150years,artistsand critics have ...
... productions for the ways they “represent” or“construct” economic values, concepts, and theories is still inits infancy,at least among those trained in professional economics. 33 While therehave been innumerableattempts from the ...
... produce, aplaythat he characterizes inthe theoretical (and “economic”) terms of the “gift.” Yet, ashe points out,even as an “obliqueeconomic referentemerges,” thehistorical conversation that abidesin “modern,” “nonrepresentational” art ...
... constitutive conditionsof a 21st century production of labor power”(Watkins, Chapter 6). Fromthe aesthetic asaclass process wemove toCraufurd D. Goodwin's “Economics Meets Esthetics in the Bloomsbury Group,” which focuses.
... , McCloskey offers herinsightson the relationshipsbetween aesthetic production andvalueand economicdiscourses andpractice. Everthe defender of capitalism and the middle classes, McCloskey argues for the ethical responsibility.
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Sublime Economy: On the Intersection of Art and Economics Jack Amariglio,Joseph W. Childers,Stephen E. Cullenberg Vista previa limitada - 2008 |
Sublime Economy: On the Intersection of Art and Economics Jack Amariglio,Joseph W. Childers,Stephen E. Cullenberg Sin vista previa disponible - 2010 |
Sublime Economy: On the Intersection of Art and Economics Jack Amariglio Sin vista previa disponible - 2009 |