Cover image for Beautiful Democracy : Aesthetics and Anarchy in a Global Era.
Beautiful Democracy : Aesthetics and Anarchy in a Global Era.
Title:
Beautiful Democracy : Aesthetics and Anarchy in a Global Era.
Author:
Castronovo, Russ.
ISBN:
9780226096308
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (302 pages)
Contents:
Contents -- Illustrations -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: Aesthetics and the Anarchy of Global Culture -- The Cultured Few -- Aesthetics 101 -- The Popular Rage -- Artwork Essays at the Antipodes -- 1. Flowers and Billy Clubs: The Beauty and Danger of Ethical Citizenship -- Beauty and Civic Identity -- Beauty and Science -- Beauty and Crowd Control -- Beauty and Danger -- 2. American Literature Internationale: Translation, Strike, and the Time of Political Possibility -- Translating Aesthetics to the Common -- The Time of American Literature -- 1877: The Time is Now -- Art for the Post-Revolution: Whitman and Santayana -- The Hazards of New Translation -- Novelists for (against?) Change -- 3. Beauty along the Color Line: Lynching, Form, and Aesthetics -- Aesthetics versus Art -- Aestheticizing Violence -- Organized Propaganda -- Gendering Aesthetics -- Alternative Aesthetics -- 4. "Bombs of Laughter": Motion Pictures, Mass Art, and Universal Language -- Classic Beauty for Modern Times -- Du Bois at the Movies: Ugliness, Endlessness, and Jim Crow -- The Sound of the Image: Chaplin and International Laughter -- Esperanto of the Eye: Anarchy and Internationalism -- 5. Geo-Aesthetics: Fascism, Globalism, and Frank Norris -- Worldwide Unity and Formalism -- Art and Terror -- Literature "As Such" -- Geo-Aesthetics -- Postfascist Form -- Afterword -- Notes -- Works Cited -- Index.
Abstract:
The photographer and reformer Jacob Riis once wrote, "I have seen an armful of daisies keep the peace of a block better than a policeman and his club." Riis was not alone in his belief that beauty could tame urban chaos, but are aesthetic experiences always a social good? Could aesthetics also inspire violent crime, working-class unrest, and racial murder? To answer these questions, Russ Castronovo turns to those who debated claims that art could democratize culture-civic reformers, anarchists, novelists, civil rights activists, and college professors-to reveal that beauty provides unexpected occasions for radical, even revolutionary, political thinking. Beautiful Democracy explores the intersection of beauty and violence by examining university lectures and course materials on aesthetics from a century ago along with riots, acts of domestic terrorism, magic lantern exhibitions, and other public spectacles. Philosophical aesthetics, realist novels, urban photography, and black periodicals, Castronovo argues, inspired and instigated all sorts of collective social endeavors, from the progressive nature of tenement reform to the horrors of lynching. Discussing Jane Addams, W.E.B. Du Bois, Charlie Chaplin, William Dean Howells, and Riis as aesthetic theorists in the company of Kant and Schiller, Beautiful Democracy ultimately suggests that the distance separating academic thinking and popular wisdom about social transformation is narrower than we generally suppose.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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