Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Aesthetics and Autobiography in Cavell

View through CrossRef
Stanley Cavell is one of very few philosophers who systematically reflect on the impact and influence of autobiographical detail, experience, and preferences on their philosophical work. The aim of this essay is to show how Cavell’s use of autobiographical exploration is rooted in his early aesthetic theory, in particular his view of the similarities between philosophy and aesthetic criticism. Cavell argues that criticism starts by exploiting and incorporating a subjective vantage point, eventually bringing the reader to test the significance of a work on herself. In his ‘Aesthetic Problems of Modern Philosophy’, Cavell states exactly this form of appeal to the ‘We’ of author and reader as the basic move of his own version of ‘ordinary language philosophy’. It is because of the connections Cavell sees between criticism and philosophy that his aesthetic diagnosis harks back on his overall critical style of thinking.
Title: Aesthetics and Autobiography in Cavell
Description:
Stanley Cavell is one of very few philosophers who systematically reflect on the impact and influence of autobiographical detail, experience, and preferences on their philosophical work.
The aim of this essay is to show how Cavell’s use of autobiographical exploration is rooted in his early aesthetic theory, in particular his view of the similarities between philosophy and aesthetic criticism.
Cavell argues that criticism starts by exploiting and incorporating a subjective vantage point, eventually bringing the reader to test the significance of a work on herself.
In his ‘Aesthetic Problems of Modern Philosophy’, Cavell states exactly this form of appeal to the ‘We’ of author and reader as the basic move of his own version of ‘ordinary language philosophy’.
It is because of the connections Cavell sees between criticism and philosophy that his aesthetic diagnosis harks back on his overall critical style of thinking.

Related Results

Logic and Voice
Logic and Voice
In this paper, I aim to reconstruct and discuss Stanley Cavell’s interpretation and critique of analytic philosophy. Cavell objects to the tradition of analytic philosophy that, in...
Chinese Environmental Aesthetics
Chinese Environmental Aesthetics
As an independent modern humanities discipline, aesthetics is an essential part of philosophy. Environmental aesthetics is the application of aesthetic theory in the field of envir...
Stanley Cavell interviewed by Naoko Saito
Stanley Cavell interviewed by Naoko Saito
Abstract In this interview with Naoko Saito, Stanley Cavell responds to questions about how he became interested in Wittgenstein and his sense of Wittgenstein’s f...
Modern Western Ecological Aesthetics from the Perspective of Aesthetics
Modern Western Ecological Aesthetics from the Perspective of Aesthetics
Aesthetics is the study of people's perception and experience of heaven, earth and man and all things. Environment and landscape are the most important perceptual manifestation of ...
Grammer of Grief
Grammer of Grief
This essay investigates the relationship between mourning and linguistic structure, proposing that grief produces not merely emotional disruption but a reconfiguration of grammar i...
Stanley Cavell: Emersonian Individualist
Stanley Cavell: Emersonian Individualist
Ralph Waldo Emerson was Cavell’s most significant intellectual mentor. He claimed that Emerson made a singular contribution to the history of American thought with a clarion call t...
Canada's Arctic sector claim in historical perspective: a response to Alan MacEachern–PUBLISHER'S NOTE
Canada's Arctic sector claim in historical perspective: a response to Alan MacEachern–PUBLISHER'S NOTE
In Cavell (2017) the opening paragraph states that ‘Alan MacEachern neglects primary evidence cited in my other publications on Bernier (Cavell 2010; Cavell 2011; Cavell 2014; Cave...
Stanley Cavell and Philosophy as Translation
Stanley Cavell and Philosophy as Translation
Translation exposes aspects of language that can easily be ignored, renewing the sense of the proximity and inseparability of language and thought. The ancient quarrel between phil...

Back to Top