Watsuji Tetsuro and The Subject of Aesthetics

<p>A central question in aesthetics is whether aesthetic judgment is subjective or objective. Existing approaches to answering this question have been unsatisfying because they begin with the assumption of an individual observer that must then be communalized through the introduction of a tran...

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Main Author: Johnson, Carl Matthew
Language:EN
Published: University of Hawai'i at Manoa 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=3569117
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spelling ndltd-PROQUEST-oai-pqdtoai.proquest.com-35691172013-11-07T15:56:10Z Watsuji Tetsuro and The Subject of Aesthetics Johnson, Carl Matthew Asian Studies|Philosophy|Aesthetics <p>A central question in aesthetics is whether aesthetic judgment is subjective or objective. Existing approaches to answering this question have been unsatisfying because they begin with the assumption of an individual observer that must then be communalized through the introduction of a transcendent object or the transcendental reason of the subject. </p><p> Rather than introduce a vertical transcendence to account for the ideal observer, I propose an alternative account based on the anthropology of the Japanese philosopher W<p style="font-variant: small-caps">ATSUJI</p> Tetsur&omacr;. According to Watsuji, human existence is a movement of double negation whereby we negate our emptiness in order to individuate ourselves and we negate our individuality in order to form communal wholes. Human beings are empty of independent existence, and thus open to create ideal aesthetic subjects in historically and regionally situated communal contexts. </p><p> I propose an account of aesthetic experience as a double negation in which we negate our surroundings in order to create a sense of psychical distance and negate our ordinary selves in order to dissolve into the background of primordial unity. I examine aesthetic normativity and find that the subject of aesthetics is active and plural rather than passive and individual. Aesthetic judgment and taste are, respectively, individual and communal moments in the process of double negation. Artistic evolution is a process by which the context of artist, artwork, and audience develop into a meaningful historical milieu. Genius is the ability to make public one&rsquo;s private values through the creation of objects that can travel beyond their original contexts and create new contexts around them. Such an ability is the result of a double negation played out between the genius and critical receptivity. </p><p> Extended examples taken from Noh theater, Japanese linked verse, tea ceremony, and <i>The Tale of Genji</i> are also used to illustrate my arguments. </p> University of Hawai'i at Manoa 2013-05-08 00:00:00.0 thesis http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=3569117 EN
collection NDLTD
language EN
sources NDLTD
topic Asian Studies|Philosophy|Aesthetics
spellingShingle Asian Studies|Philosophy|Aesthetics
Johnson, Carl Matthew
Watsuji Tetsuro and The Subject of Aesthetics
description <p>A central question in aesthetics is whether aesthetic judgment is subjective or objective. Existing approaches to answering this question have been unsatisfying because they begin with the assumption of an individual observer that must then be communalized through the introduction of a transcendent object or the transcendental reason of the subject. </p><p> Rather than introduce a vertical transcendence to account for the ideal observer, I propose an alternative account based on the anthropology of the Japanese philosopher W<p style="font-variant: small-caps">ATSUJI</p> Tetsur&omacr;. According to Watsuji, human existence is a movement of double negation whereby we negate our emptiness in order to individuate ourselves and we negate our individuality in order to form communal wholes. Human beings are empty of independent existence, and thus open to create ideal aesthetic subjects in historically and regionally situated communal contexts. </p><p> I propose an account of aesthetic experience as a double negation in which we negate our surroundings in order to create a sense of psychical distance and negate our ordinary selves in order to dissolve into the background of primordial unity. I examine aesthetic normativity and find that the subject of aesthetics is active and plural rather than passive and individual. Aesthetic judgment and taste are, respectively, individual and communal moments in the process of double negation. Artistic evolution is a process by which the context of artist, artwork, and audience develop into a meaningful historical milieu. Genius is the ability to make public one&rsquo;s private values through the creation of objects that can travel beyond their original contexts and create new contexts around them. Such an ability is the result of a double negation played out between the genius and critical receptivity. </p><p> Extended examples taken from Noh theater, Japanese linked verse, tea ceremony, and <i>The Tale of Genji</i> are also used to illustrate my arguments. </p>
author Johnson, Carl Matthew
author_facet Johnson, Carl Matthew
author_sort Johnson, Carl Matthew
title Watsuji Tetsuro and The Subject of Aesthetics
title_short Watsuji Tetsuro and The Subject of Aesthetics
title_full Watsuji Tetsuro and The Subject of Aesthetics
title_fullStr Watsuji Tetsuro and The Subject of Aesthetics
title_full_unstemmed Watsuji Tetsuro and The Subject of Aesthetics
title_sort watsuji tetsuro and the subject of aesthetics
publisher University of Hawai'i at Manoa
publishDate 2013
url http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=3569117
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