Synopses & Reviews
Lambert Zuidervaart challenges current intellectual trends by proposing a new hermeneutic theory of artistic truth, engaging with both analytic and continental philosophies and clarifying the contemporary cultural scene. Although it is unfashionable to talk about artistic truth, its issues have not disappeared. Indeed, questions concerning the role of the artist in society, the relationship between art and knowledge, and the validity of cultural interpretation have actually intensified.
Review
"What art has to do with truth, if anything, is an issue that flits about on the periphery of most philosophy of art of the contemporary period. Zuidervaart is the first to place it in the center of attention. He does so by critically engaging both the analytic and continental traditions in the course of developing his own ideas--ideas, so I can safely predict, that will stir up not just discussion but controversy. Full of both insightful exegesis and intellectual imagination, Artistic Truth is a contribution that everyone working in the field will have to take account of." Nicholas Wolterstorff, Yale University
Review
"Skillfully crossing the borders between continental and analytic philosophy and between high art and popular culture, Zuidervaart gives new life to the question of artistic truth in the context of a bold, new, comprehensive aesthetics. While giving meticulous attention to philosophers' debates, he never loses sight of the questions of public policy to which this study is directly relevant." Merold Westphal, Fordham University
Review
"This is a trail-blazing book in aesthetics...an intellectual feast to read. Highly recommended." CHOICE June 2005 feast to read. Highly recommended." CHOICE June 2005
Review
"this thorough and far-reaching analysis of artistic truth in Western society is but the first publication in a two-part project, in which the author proposes an integrated aesthetic and social philosophy...Zuidervaart deserves praise for his efforts to make philosophers intelligible to each other, and to make art intelligible to those who question its cognitive relevance." - Lauren Bialystok
Synopsis
This book portrays artistic truth as a process of imaginative disclosure.
About the Author
Lambert Zuidervaart is Professor of Philosophy at the Institute for Christian Studies, Toronto.
Table of Contents
Preface; Introduction; Part I. Hermeneutical Matrix; 1. Beardsley's Denial; 2. Reciprocations; 3. Kant Revisited; Part II. Constructive Clearings; 4. Truth as Disclosure; 5. Imaginative Disclosure; 6. Artistic Truth; Part III. Linguistic Turns; 7. Logical Positivist Dispute; 8. Goodman's Nominalism; 9. Wolterstorff's Realism; 10. Aesthetic Transformations; Notes; Bibliography; Index.