- Docente: Eleonora Caramelli
- Credits: 6
- Language: Italian
- Teaching Mode: Traditional lectures
- Campus: Bologna
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Corso:
First cycle degree programme (L) in
Humanities (cod. 8850)
Also valid for First cycle degree programme (L) in Drama, Art and Music Studies (cod. 0956)
First cycle degree programme (L) in History (cod. 0962)
First cycle degree programme (L) in Anthropology, Religions, Oriental Civilizations (cod. 8493)
First cycle degree programme (L) in Philosophy (cod. 9216)
Learning outcomes
The purpose of this course is to give students the basic knowledge concerning the birth and the development of Aesthetics, with specific attention to the origin of fundamental concepts such as genius, taste, intuition, imitation and so on. Secondly, the present state of Aesthetics will be analysed.
Course contents
Part I Kant and Modern Aesthetics
After an introduction to the history and notion of aesthetics, the first part is dedicated to the analysis and commentary of the Critique of Judgment. The understanding of Kant's vocabulary and conceptuality will be supported by a constant comparison with the aesthetic theories preceding and contemporary to Kant, in such a way as to keep together the critical comparison with the classic reference and the introductory character of the whole module, useful to instruct students of all curricular backgrounds on the vocabulary and conceptuality of modern aesthetics.
Part II
Hegel's Aesthetics: Art, Appearance, Historicity
The second part will be devoted to the reading and commentary of the scheduled sources on Hegel's Aesthetics. Starting from the themes of Hegel's introduction to the Aesthetics, which confronts Kant and Schiller, the module will firstly deal with the transition to the historicization of aesthetics; secondly, deepening the problem of the plurality of sources we have at our disposal for Hegel's aesthetics as a classic of the discipline, the last part aims at constituting a first introduction to the more general problem of how to organize a critical confrontation with philosophical texts.
Readings/Bibliography
Modulo I
1) I. Kant, Critica del Giudizio, trad. di A. Gargiulo rivista da V. Verra, introduzione di P. D’Angelo, Laterza, Bari 1997 (e successive ristampe).
2) A. Bertinetto, G. Garelli, F. Vercellone, Lineamenti di storia dell’estetica. La filosofia dell’arte da Kant al XXI secolo.
Suggested reading:
- O. Höffe, Immanuel Kant, tr. it. di S. Carboncini, Il Mulino, Bologna 1986 (mandatory reading for non-attending students).
- F. Menegoni, La Critica del giudizio di Kant: introduzione alla lettura, Carocci, Roma 1995.
Modulo II
1) G.W.F. Hegel, Estetica, trad. di N. Merker e G. Vaccaro, introduzione di S. Givone, Einaudi, Torino 1997 , pp. 5-104.
2) G.W.F. Hegel, Lezioni di estetica, trad. e introduzione di P. D’Angelo, Laterza, Roma-Bari 2000 .
Suggested reading (mandatory reading for non-attending students):
L’estetica di Hegel, a cura di M. Farina e A.L. Siani, Il Mulino, Bologna 2015.
Teaching methods
The course will consist of frontal lessons; sources will be commented and discussed and the problems and their historical context synthetically reconstructed.
Assessment methods
The final proof will take place in the form of an oral examination. During the examination the teacher will assess whether the student has achieved or not some basic educational goals: knowledge of the texts and capacity to contextualize authors and works; comprehension of the fundamental concepts and capacity to provide a correct interpretation of them; clarity in the explanation of concepts and accuracy in the use of philosophical terminology; capacity to establish connections between the various authors and themes from both a historical and a strictly speaking conceptual point of view. During the oral examination the teacher will assess if the student possesses the abovementioned knowledge and skills in a (more or less) complete, precise and adequate way, or vice-versa in a (more or less) incomplete, vague and superficial way. The final grade will correspondently vary from excellent (30 and honors) to very good (30) to good (27-29) to fairly good (24-26) to more than enough (21-23) to merely enough (18-21) to unsatisfactory (<18).
Teaching tools
Sources commented during classroom will be provided via IOL.
Office hours
See the website of Eleonora Caramelli