Sites of vision : the discursive construction of sight in the history of philosophy
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Bibliographic Information
Sites of vision : the discursive construction of sight in the history of philosophy
MIT Press, c1997
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The contributors to this volume explore the hypothesis that the nature of visual perception about which philosophers talk must be explicitly recognized as a discursive construction, indeed a historical construction, in philosophical discourse.
Table of Contents
- From acoustics to optics - the rise of the metaphysical and demise of the melodic in Aristotle's "Poetics", P. Christopher Smith
- Aristotle on specular regimes - the theatre of philosophical discourse, James I. Porter
- discourses of vision in 17th-century metaphysics, Catherine Wilson
- how to write the history of vision - understanding the relationship between Berkeley and Descartes, Margaret Atherton
- embodying the eye of Humanism - Giambattista Vico and the eye of Ingenium, Sandra Rudnick Luft
- "for now we see through a glass darkly" - the systematics of Hegel's visual imagery, John Russon
- sighting the spirit - the rhetorical visions of "Geist" in Hegel's "Encyclopedia", John H. Smith
- perspectives and horizons - Husserl on seeing the truth, Mary C. Rawlinson
- ducks and rabbits - visuality in Wittgenstein, William James Earle
- Dewey's critique of democratic visual culture and its political implications, Yaron Ezrahi
- materialist mutations of the "Bilderverbot", Rebecca Comay
- Hannah Arendt - the activity of the spectator, Peg Birmingham
- keeping Foucault and Derrida in sight - panopticism and the politics of subversion, David Michael Levin
- difference and the ruin of representation in Gilles Deleuze, Dorothea Olkowski.
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