The Aesthetics of the Elements: Imaginary Morphologies in Texts and Paintings
Book Details
Author(s)Hans-Erik Larsen
PublisherAarhus University Press
ISBN / ASIN8772885432
ISBN-139788772885438
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank12,404,599
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
This book introduces a semiotic and phenomenological understanding of the four elements: earth, air, fire, water, as they appear in description and depiction.
It develops a theory of the imaginary in human thought, and examines the occurrence of the elements, not in their role as trivial contents of the imaginary, but rather as aspects of its constitutive background - as material dimensions giving rise to direct and dynamic cognitive structure. The elements thus evoke universal evaluated sensations, and provide simple schematic conceptual primitives, in contrast with complex higher-order metaphoric structures which may rely on them. The elements are here understood as a mental palette in perception, as well as in aesthetic and philosophical expression.
The validity of this view is demonstrated by analysing literary works by Soren Kierkegaard, Thorkild Bjornvig, Simon Grotrian, and Arne Johnson, and paintings by J. M. W. Turner and Edward Hopper. The analysis is based on an empirical application of catastrophe theory to works of art, and it proposes new semiotic techniques for the interpretation of art and imagination in general.
It develops a theory of the imaginary in human thought, and examines the occurrence of the elements, not in their role as trivial contents of the imaginary, but rather as aspects of its constitutive background - as material dimensions giving rise to direct and dynamic cognitive structure. The elements thus evoke universal evaluated sensations, and provide simple schematic conceptual primitives, in contrast with complex higher-order metaphoric structures which may rely on them. The elements are here understood as a mental palette in perception, as well as in aesthetic and philosophical expression.
The validity of this view is demonstrated by analysing literary works by Soren Kierkegaard, Thorkild Bjornvig, Simon Grotrian, and Arne Johnson, and paintings by J. M. W. Turner and Edward Hopper. The analysis is based on an empirical application of catastrophe theory to works of art, and it proposes new semiotic techniques for the interpretation of art and imagination in general.
