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Winckelmann and the notion of aesthetic education

Winckelmann and the notion of aesthetic education1996

Jeffrey Morrison

About this book

This book examines the pivotal role of Johann Joachim Winckelmann as an arbiter of classical taste. It identifies the key features of Winckelmann's treatment of classical beauty, particularly in his famous descriptions, and investigates his teaching of the appreciation of beauty. The work identifies and examines the point at which theory and descriptive method are merged in a practical attempt to offer aesthetic education. The publications and correspondence of Winckelmann's pupils are offered as criteria for judging the success of his mission, eventually casting doubt upon his concept of aesthetic education, both in theory and in practice. The final chapter of the book is concerned with Goethe's reception of Winckelmann, which shows unusual sensitivity to his work's aesthetic core. It also shows how Goethe's own writing on Italy reveals a process of independent aesthetic education akin to Winckelmann's and distinct from his pupils. The work is founded in close textual analysis but also covers the principles of aesthetic education, the value of the Grand Tour and the role of Rome in the European imagination.

Details

First published
1996
OL Work ID
OL2976681W

Subjects

AestheticsAesthetics, GermanAesthetics, ModernGerman AestheticsModern AestheticsStudy and teachingWinckelmann, johann joachim, 1717-1768Goethe, johann wolfgang von, 1749-1832

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Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.