Authenticity in Painting: Remarks on Michael Fried’s Art History.Michael Fried,Robert Pippin,Michel Chaouli,Stefan Andriopoulos,Richard Menke,Carlo Ginzburg,Dragan Kujundzic,Jacques Derrida &J. Hillis Miller -2005 -Critical Inquiry 31 (3):575.detailsMy topic is authenticity in or perhaps as painting, not the authenticity of paintings; I know next to nothing about the problem of verifying claims of authorship. I am interested in another kind of genuineness and fraudulence, the kind at issue when we say of a person that he or she is false, not genuine, inauthentic, lacks integrity, and, especially when we say he or she is playing to the crowd, playing for effect, or is a poseur. These are not (...) quite moral distinctions (no one has a duty to be authentic), but they are robustly normative appraisals, applicable even when such falseness is not a case of straight hypocrisy but of lack of self-knowledge or of self-deceit. (A person can be quite sincere and not realize the extent of her submission to the other’s expectations and demands.) This sort of appraisal also has a long history in post-Rousseauist reflections on the dangers of uniquely modern forms of social dependence, and they are prominent worries in the modern novel. (shrink)
Thinking with Kant’scritique of Judgment.Michel Chaouli -2017 - Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press.detailsMichel Chaouli invites novice and expert alike to set out on the path of thinking, with help from Kant’s Critique of Judgment, about the force of aesthetic experience, the essence of art, and the relationship of beauty and meaning. Each chapter unfolds the significance of a key concept for Kant’s thought and our own ideas.