Subjectivity in Hegel's Aesthetics
Focusing primarily on Hegel's oft-neglected Lectures on Aesthetics, this dissertation identifies three distinct aspects of aesthetic subjectivity: aesthetic experience, aesthetic freedom, and aesthetic imagination (both creative and interpretive). A closer look at the development of these categories in the Aesthetics challenges the standard profile of Hegel's philosophy in three ways. First, it reveals a more constitutive role of subjectivity within the broader canon of Hegel's thought, and does so with a level of clarity and concreteness absent in many of the earlier, better-known works. Second, it blurs the standard dichotomy between 'subjectivist' and 'objectivist' aesthetic theories: Hegel's philosophy of art begins as an internal, dialectical development of core aesthetic doctrines in Kant, such as purposiveness, disinterestedness, imagination, and artistic genius. This continuity thesis in turn provides a more nuanced historical analysis of Hegel's relation to 19th century German romanticism, including Goethe, Schiller, and Friedrich Schlegel. Finally, a new theory of aesthetic subjectivity in Hegel offers a timely and much-needed alternative to the postmodern emphasis on the 'negativity' of art, focusing instead on art's potential to offer a positive form of social and political dialogue.
History
Date Modified
2017-06-02Defense Date
2011-04-04Research Director(s)
Fred RushCommittee Members
Richard Eldridge Gary Gutting Stephen WatsonDegree
- Doctor of Philosophy
Degree Level
- Doctoral Dissertation
Language
- English
Alternate Identifier
etd-04152011-090903Publisher
University of Notre DameAdditional Groups
- Philosophy
Program Name
- Philosophy