The Mask of Art: Breaking the Aesthetic Contract—Film and Literature"In this critique of aesthetics and the politics of representation, Taylor demonstrates astonishing breadth and depth in arguing for 'breaking the aesthetic contract' that excludes anything that does not conform to Eurocentric notions of beauty. . . . it brings to black studies and cultural critique an internationalism that emphasizes the richness of forms of creative expression outside the norms set by European aesthetics. Highly recommended . . ." —Choice Cultural critic Clyde Taylor exposes the concept of "art" as a tool of ethnocentricity and racial ideology. By examining various texts including The Birth of a Nation and The Cotton Club, Taylor demonstrates how rationales of "art" are used to mask personal, class, and cultural biases. Other works such as those by Toni Morrison, Chinua Achebe, and Spike Lee are scrutinized in terms of resistance to the dominant system of aesthetics. |
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Contents
Figureground vasefaces per Rubin | 32 |
CHAPTER 2 | 38 |
CHAPTER 3 | 53 |
Copyright | |
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The Mask of Art: Breaking the Aesthetic Contract—Film and Literature Clyde Taylor Limited preview - 1998 |
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Aesopian aesthetic aestheticism African American artists authority beauty become Black called carry century character cinema civilization claims classical color concept construction critical critique cultural discourse dominant effect Ethiopicist European existence experience expression fact feminist figure film force frames function given Greek Griffith's ground hero Hollywood human idea ideal identity ideology imagine imperfect important instance interests interpretation ironic irony issue kind knowledge language less liberal literature look major master meaning minority minstrel show movement narrative nature never notion novel object once original philosophy play political popular position possible practice present Press production question racial racism radical reasoning reflects relation representation resistance role seen significance slave social society story symbolic theory thing thought tion tradition understanding University values Western White women writing York