Expressing Dwelling: Dewey and Hegel on Art as Cultural Self-Articulation

Contemporary Pragmatism 12 (1):38-58 (2015)
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Abstract

John Dewey shows the essential role of artistic expression in experience. Expression, as emotional articulation, is essential to establishing our intimate engagement with the world. G.W.F. Hegel shows that just this process of expressing our mode of “dwelling” in the world has been operative historically at the cultural level. It is characteristic of contemporary art that, in attempting to establish a new form of dwelling within the context of our technological world, it articulates just this vision of our experience as essentially expressive.

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Author's Profile

John Russon
University of Guelph

References found in this work

Emotional Subjects: Mood and Articulation in Hegel’s Philosophy of Mind.John Russon - 2009 - International Philosophical Quarterly 49 (1):41-52.

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