A PHILOSOPHY OF GARDENS, by David E. Cooper. Oxford: Oxford University
Press, 2006, 173 pp., $35.00 cloth.
It is very likely that more people devote more aesthetic attention to
gardens and their contents than they do to any other set of objects in
the art world or in natural environments. Despite this, however, there
has been very little philosophical writing devoted specifically to the
aesthetics of the garden experience. Mara Miller (The Garden as an
Art, 1993) and Stephanie Ross (What Gardens Mean, 1998)
have written important studies of gardens from the philosophical point
of view. John Dixon Hunt has written several philosophically informed
studies from the historical point of view (The Figure in the Landscape:
Poetry, Painting, and Gardening during the Eighteenth Century, 1976;
Gardens and the Picturesque: Studies in the History of Landscape Architecture,
1992; Garden and Grove: The Italian Renaissance Garden in the English
Imagination, 1600-1750, 1996). But apart from this valuable handful
of discussions, the subject area has received scant scholarly attention.
David Cooper's new book, A Philosophy of Gardens, is a very welcome addition
to this underscrutinized field of inquiry.
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