Intensity and Its Audiences: Toward a Feminist Perspective on the Kantian Sublime
Abstract
The goal of this essay is to begin a reassessment of Kant's aesthetics and specifically his account of the sublime. This reassessment is intended to demonstrate its indebtedness to some recent feminist critics of philosophy and literature. Somewhat artificially, I will characterize the criticism in question as containing two categories or directions of investigation. The first sort is aimed at the unmasking of gender prejudice and ideology in the standpoint or conceptual framework of writers such as Burke and Kant. the second sort of criticism is less familiar and harder to characterize, but it can be located among the works of literary critics who make use of recent poststruturalist philosophy and psychoanalysis. . . principally the work of Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, along with that of Neil Hertz, Frances Ferguson, Joshua Wilner, and Naomi Schor.