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Practical Form : Abstraction, Technique, and Beauty in Eighteenth-Century Aesthetics

Part of the The Lewis Walpole series in eighteenth-century culture and history series
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A groundbreaking study of the development of form in eighteenth-century aesthetics   In this original work, Abigail Zitin proposes a new history of the development of form as a concept in and for aesthetics.

Her account substitutes women and artisans for the proverbial man of taste, asserting them as central figures in the rise of aesthetics as a field of philosophical inquiry in eighteenth-century Europe.

She shows how the idea of formal abstraction so central to conceptions of beauty in this period emerges from the way practitioners think about craft and skill across the domestic, industrial, and so-called high arts.

Zitin elegantly maps the complex connections among aesthetics, form, and formalism, drawing out the understated presence of practice in the writings of major eighteenth-century thinkers including Locke, Addison, Burke, and Kant.

This new take on an old story ultimately challenges readers to reconsider form and why it matters.

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Product Details
Yale University Press
0300244568 / 9780300244564
Hardback
111.85
12/01/2021
United States
English
248 pages, 6 b-w illus.
156 x 235 mm