Diderot, Rousseau and the politics of the arts in the Enlightenment
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Diderot, Rousseau and the politics of the arts in the Enlightenment
(Oxford University studies in the Enlightenment, 2023:01)
Liverpool University Press on behalf of Voltaire Foundation, University of Oxford, c2023
- : pbk
Available at / 9 libraries
-
No Libraries matched.
- Remove all filters.
Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 373-404) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
In mid-eighteenth-century Paris, the encyclopedists launched a campaign to radically redefine the public dimension of all 'imaginative' arts, starting with music - with the querelle des bouffons - then theatre, the novel and finally the visual arts. Diderot, Rousseau and the Politics of the Arts in the Enlightenment exposes the correlation between the prejudices and hierarchies of the political and social system of the time and what d'Alembert calls 'literary superstitions'. The book reconstructs the role of Diderot and Rousseau, freres ennemis, as they engaged in a dispute that was above all else political, despite revolving entirely around forms of artistic expression. Throwing a light on this important cultural event is all the more necessary because the essentially political dimension of Diderot's Salons has since the nineteenth-century been completely obscured from view. Indeed, at first misunderstood and then totally neglected, for over two centuries their true significance has been systematically ignored by the aesthetic-idealist school of criticism.
Table of Contents
Preface
Introduction
Part I: The Beginnings: Music, Theatre, the Novel
Chapter 1. The problem of the theatrical Ancien regime: Musical opera
Chapter 2. Stage theatre: The real substance of the dispute
Chapter 3: A 'politics' of the novel and the chasm between ancient and modern
Chapter 4. The function and destiny of badly written theatre
Part II: The Subverters of the Artistic Culture of the Ancien regime
Chapter 5: The Moment of the Fine Arts
Chapter 6: Optical Illusions, and a Necessary Premise
Chapter 7: Diderot and the Art of Politics for All
Chapter 8: Painters and genres: norms, reality, the response of the market
Chapter 9: New Spaces, Old Obligations
Part III: In the Infernal Workshop of the Salons of Painting
Chapter 10: Diderot, Rousseau and the 'Citizen' Artist
Chapter 11: Towards a 'Politics' of the Sublime
Chapter 12: The Dignity of the Masses and the Eternal 'Lie' of Allegory
Chapter 13: All that Others never Wrote
Part IV: Finale
Chapter 14: Concluding remarks and epilogue
Bibliography
by "Nielsen BookData"