Complexities of Aesthetic Experience: Response to Johnston
by Richard J. Shusterman
I am grateful for this opportunity
to clarify my views on aesthetic experience and somaesthetics that Scott
Johnston discusses. Combining two very vague and contested ideas ("experience"
and "the aesthetic"), the concept of aesthetic experience is an extremely
ambiguous notion some of whose principal different conceptions I have
carefully tried to outline. It is therefore rash for Johnston to presume
that what I mean by aesthetic experience is simply "the [Deweyan] sort
of experience that connotes an immediate, qualitative whole" that is "consummatory."
Though I deeply appreciate John Dewey's view, I have also criticized it
on several counts. I insist, for example, on the existence and value of
aesthetic experiences of fragmentation and rupture that have neither the
unity of coherence nor that of completion that Dewey demands. In fact,
as I have often pointed out, part of my interest in rap music was connected
to its aesthetic of fragmentation.
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