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Julie Kuhlken
Why Philosophers Take Artists Seriously
Nietzsche on Wagner, Heidegger on Hölderlin, Adorno on Schönberg
2013. 252 S. 220 mm
Verlag/Jahr: SCHOLAR´S PRESS 2013
ISBN: 3-639-51883-7 (3639518837)
Neue ISBN: 978-3-639-51883-2 (9783639518832)
Preis und Lieferzeit: Bitte klicken
Within the history of philosophy, it is generally acknowledged that art has played a uniquely formative role in the development of philosophical practice. Many trace this tendency back to Plato, and his ambiguous reliance on art as both a model for his own practice, as well as a threat to the harmonious functioning of the Republic. What has received less attention is the Kantian reversal of the Platonic dismissal of artists, and how it has generated a rich philosophical literature, of which the three pairs considered here are illuminating instances. These three are Friedrich Nietzsche´s lifelong engagement with Richard Wagner, Martin Heidegger´s assimilation of Friedrich Hölderlin´s poetry within his philosophical thinking, and Theodor Adorno´s analysis of Arnold Schönberg´s music as exemplary for our understanding of contemporary society. In its first half, the book uncovers the weakness of approaching these relationships according to the romantic conception of artistic practice. In the second, it proposes a robust conception of exemplarity, which allows us to rethink the division between theory and practice and open up to new ways of integrating action and thought.
Julie Kuhlken received her doctorate in Philosophy at the Centre for Research in Modern European Philosophy at Middlesex University in London. She has taught in both the UK and North America, including Goldsmiths College and Concordia University, and is currently president of the Southwestern Philosophical Society