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The Forbidden Subject: How Oppositional Aesthetics Banished Natural Beauty from the Arts

English

By (author): Peter Quigley

`We are fools to turn from the superhuman beauty The Forbidden Subject launches from Ed Abbeys affirmation in Desert Solitaire: `This is the most beautiful place on earth. How could such a sentiment become construed as problematic, elitist, or worse? How was a calculated and intentional attack on beauty sustained for more than a century? How did beauty become, and why does it largely remain, what Emory Elliot dubbed `the forbidden subject? This book reviews the devastating impacts modernist avant-garde, Marxism, some feminisms and postmodernism have enacted through paranoia, blame, cynicism on beauty, hope and desire. Oppositional epistemologies deliberately eviscerated the possibilities and standing of beauty in criticism as well as in lived experience. According to Myra Jehlen, the orthodox critic thus became `an adversary of the work he or she analyses, tasked with undoing the aesthetic deception of what was read to `expose its misrepresentations and false ideals, to strip away the lie and expose the liar. Tracing the war on natural beauty through the literary and visual arts, The Forbidden Subject asks what it has meant for the humanities, for problem solving environmental issues, for educating students, for our personal lives and, more recently, for ecocriticism. The book asks if current ecocriticism has been misdirected by the corrosive weight of negativity the requirement always to be `reading against that has persisted in the arts and humanities for decades. It rehearses why a `return to beauty was imperative, and what has happened to that return since the turn of the twenty-first century. Pondering these questions, The Forbidden Subject intertwines the potential place and nature of beauty and the beauty of nature and place, concluding with a substantial reading of the poetry and thought of Robinson Jeffers. See more
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Product Details
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 22 Jul 2019
  • Publisher: White Horse Press
  • Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
  • Language: English
  • ISBN13: 9781912186099

About Peter Quigley

Peter Quigley is associate Vice President of academics and Professor of English at the University of Hawaii Manoa. His recent books are Housing the Environmental Imagination: Beauty Politics and Refuge in American Nature Writing and Ecocritical Aesthetics: Language Beauty and the Environment (ed. with Scott Slovic). He has worked in ecocritical studies since the mid 1980s and has a long-time interest in the life and work of Robinson Jeffers having been President of the Jeffers Association for several years. He works on Oahu Hawaii but lives part-time on the Big Island situated near the ocean and on the worlds most active volcano with his wife sons and Golden Retrievers.

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