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The Gay Science
An analysis of the boundaries between poetry and science, the issue of criticism, and the ethics of artistic production.
Eneas Sweetland Dallas (Author)
9781108073134, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 19 May 2011
356 pages
21.6 x 14 x 2 cm, 0.45 kg
Eneas Sweetland (E. S.) Dallas (1828–1879) was a journalist who worked for The Times among other publications and whose interest in psychology and love of poetry led to his writing the two-volume – though he originally intended four – The Gay Science, published in 1866. The work takes its title from an expression used by Provençal troubadours to describe the art of composing poetry, and the volumes are concerned with the unclear and often shifting boundaries between art and science and whether they can be reconciled. Volume 2 considers this question in relation to pleasure: what it is, the historical and philosophical understanding of this emotion and sensation, whether it should be pursued, and its relation to artistic production. The remainder of the book looks at the issue of the ethics of art and the nature of artistic enterprise, as well as the changing stance of the viewer.
10. On pleasure
11. Mixed pleasure
12. Pure pleasure
13. Hidden pleasure
14. The ethics of art
15. The pursuit of pleasure
16. The world of fiction
17. The ethical current
Index.
Subject Areas: History of ideas [JFCX]
