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2021, British Journal of Aesthetics
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23 pages
1 file
Much art is committed to political causes. However, does art contribute something unique to political discourse, or does it merely reflect the insights of political science and political philosophy? Here I argue for indispensability of art to political discourse by building on the debate about artistic cognitivism, the view that art is a source of knowledge. Different artforms, I suggest, make available specific epistemic resources, which allow audiences to overcome epistemic obstacles that obtain in a given ideological situation. My goal is to offer a general model for identifying cognitive advantages for artworks belonging to distinct artforms and genres (e.g. satire, visibility-raising artworks, caricatures…), in a way that can account for each artwork's historical and cultural specificity. More speculatively, however, my account also comments on the ancient struggle between philosophy and the arts as competing modes of persuasion, and expands our notion of legitimate political discourse to include a greater plurality of discursive genres.
The question of whether such a notion as 'political art' exists or if it is merely a result of interpretation of its ideology became especially relevant nowadays with the rapid development of such trends as global capitalism, political performance, and contemporary art in particular. One of the unifying aspects in researching these phenomena concerns not only nature of art and ideology as such but straightforwardly linked to their cross-functionality in contemporary society. With this paper I want to focus on the dialectic of art and ideology. More specifically, I want to go deeper into the ideological role of political art and to explore what stakes are raised by such speculative function. To do so, I will employ Eco's theory of cultural codes and Barthes mythology, on the one hand, and will examine the processes of art reading and mythologization in art. On the other hand, I will turn to the theoretical findings of Althusser, Zizek and Lacan and will look deeper into the interplay of art and ideology.
Chapter 1. Literature review: political art, competing thinking on the politics of art.
This article focuses on one issue in the wide-ranging, contemporary debates on the relation between art and politics, namely, philosophy's role in these debates and the contribution it makes. In the background, this survey acknowledges that philosophy may provide useful conceptual clarification regarding the many ways the arts engage in and with the political sphere, for example in the production of propaganda art and the uses of images in mass media; the use of the arts in identity politics and political demonstration; institutional histories and in the marketing and consuming of art products; issues of censorship and international law pertaining to the return of stolen art. However, in the foreground this survey treats the question more abstractly. It focuses on three relations: disenfranchisement, distantiationy, and indirectness.
2019
Kia Lindroos and Frank Möller, the editors of this volume, raise a serious question: Can art increase political awareness either through witnessing itself or by creating witnesses in its audience? Wisely, the book does not attempt to provide a single, definitive answer to these questions; instead, the editors explain that they selected authors who examine aesthetic forms of expression, with the intention of an inquiry into an expanded idea of who is a witness. Beginning with the definition of witness from the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary on Historical Principles as someone “who is or was present, and is able to testify from personal observation,” the editors then briefly relate how each author departs from this standard definition. Lindroos and Möller have created a collection in which each chapter fits the theme of exploring art as a political witness, and yet, from Bruno Lefort’s “Achrafiyeh: The Politics of Fear in a Visual Representation of Lebanese Factionalism” to Sally B...
In his most recent book Boris Groys brings up the current discussion on Art Activism, that is “the ability of art to function as arena and medium of political protest and social activism”.He considers the critique towards it on the notion of aethetization should be readressed by rethinking its definition. For this purpose he suggests to trace back and to reformulate Walter Benjamin’s concepts of aestheticization of politics - instrumentalization of art at the service of totalitarian powers enhancing the values of ritual, genious, eternity associated to the artwork’s aura- and politization of art -deployment of art in its political dimension, to the service of social transformation through the employment of new reproduction’s techniques that erase the aura-; as well as to take into consideration contemporary technological advances that are transforming works of art’s and image’s reproduction, distribution and reception. It is under the contemporary historical context that I inquire about the possibility and necessity of Political Art, departing from Walter Benjamin’s essay “ The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction” and research the problems, risks and critiques it currently faces. First, a clarification of what he meant by aestheticization of politics and politization of art is needed in order to consider those features which could be of help today and to be compared to Groys’ approach and conceptualization of artistic aesthetization. This clarification would lead to the question of whether a new definition of Political Art is needed and what its functions might be, regarding our present time and whether historical circumstances make it necessary or not. At the time of asking which might be Political Art’s functions, I would like to develop this question in relation to my own artwork on the Spanish Civil War - which I consider Political Art- and how this notion could play a role in the remembering of the past, how could it assist us to look the hopes of the past in the present, and thus awakening a political consciousness on the individual. However, I am well aware that if a new definition of Political Art is needed, so too is to draw its boundaries and limitations. It is precisely on this point that Benjamin’s theory, as Adorno criticized him, resulted ambiguous as to the boundary line between aesthetization of politics and politization of art. Consequently and finally, it is of great importance to try to find as unequivocal separation as possible between a political art waking up consciousness and political art as propaganda, if we are going to stand for the claim of the possibility and necessity of Political Art.
Many voices and stories have been systematically silenced in interpersonal conversations, political deliberations and historical narratives. Recalcitrant and interrelated patterns of epistemic, political, cultural and economic marginalisation exclude individuals as knowers, citizens, agents. Two questions lie at the centre of this paper, which focuses on the epistemically – but also politically, culturally, and economically – dominant: How can we sabotage the dominant's investment in their own ignorance of unjust silencing? How can they be seduced to become acute perceivers of others' experiences of oppression and reckon with their own participation in it? Situated at the intersection between political theory, aesthetics, and epistemology, this paper contributes a so-‐‑ far-‐‑ unexplored suggestion: that certain literary works create epistemic friction between shared, entrenched prejudices on the one hand, and representations of epistemic exclusion or authority, on the other. Their power to illuminate ideational, moral, and experiential limitations makes them valuable tools in problematising, rendering visible and dislocating epistemic injustice, as well as other marginalisations it intersects with. To advance this argument, the paper relies on insights from aesthetics, unpacking fiction's multidimensional epistemic potential. Audre Lorde exemplifies literary works' ability to seductively sabotage bias and provide audiences with prosthetic visions of unfamiliar experiences of marginalisation.
Contemporary Aesthetics, 2013
This paper is in three parts: first I will compare aesthetic and practical perception; second I will articulate ideas about the image and its engaging power; this will lead my argument to the investigation of how art and images can be effective in the symbolic ordering of our social relations.
Studies on Art and Architecture 26,1-2 (2017), 7-14
As a person coming from a background in policy advocacy and social activism rather than from within the art world, I am very interested in the political role of art and in the debate over the proper role and ways in which art can and should bring about political change. I am reminded too of the apartheid years in my home country, South Africa, where there was much debate in cultural circles in the late 1980’s about the role of art and culture in the struggle for democracy. In this paper I discuss the various positions on this question presented by Claire Bishop, Chantal Mouffe and Jacques Rancière, and consider these with reference to two contrasting examples of art work focused on the issue of the border between Mexico and the USA.
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