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Crossing borders: Towards a cognitive aesthetic approach to Caravaggio and Beckett
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Abstract
When conducting interart studies, difficulty arises
comparing art forms due to differences in discourse between genres. The problem
becomes compounded when certain art works extend their mode of communication
beyond the boundaries of their genre. Interpreting such works tends to result in
subjectivist readings that cannot be justified according to any predetermined
analytical model. Rather than negating the subjective response, this article
proposes that an artwork is realized within the mind. In examining critical
responses to Caravaggio’s painting ‘Beheading of St. John the Baptist’ and
Beckett’s play ‘Not I’ according to a cognitive aesthetic, one discovers a
rationale for considering the painting as stimulating a feeling of motion while
the play evokes a feeling of stasis, contrary to their respective
genres.
Title: Crossing borders: Towards a cognitive aesthetic approach to Caravaggio and Beckett
Description:
Abstract
When conducting interart studies, difficulty arises
comparing art forms due to differences in discourse between genres.
The problem
becomes compounded when certain art works extend their mode of communication
beyond the boundaries of their genre.
Interpreting such works tends to result in
subjectivist readings that cannot be justified according to any predetermined
analytical model.
Rather than negating the subjective response, this article
proposes that an artwork is realized within the mind.
In examining critical
responses to Caravaggio’s painting ‘Beheading of St.
John the Baptist’ and
Beckett’s play ‘Not I’ according to a cognitive aesthetic, one discovers a
rationale for considering the painting as stimulating a feeling of motion while
the play evokes a feeling of stasis, contrary to their respective
genres.
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