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Diversity Reading List

Helping you include authors from under-represented groups in your teaching

Expression

Posted on November 27, 2017June 26, 2025 by Simon Fokt

Summary: Sketches how art and science have interacted in the development of portraiture since the 17thc and how both fields have contributed to the study of facial expression. Discusses Descartes, Le Brun, Lavater, Charles Bell, Duchenne, Darwin, Ekman.

Posted in Aesthetic Representation, Aesthetics, Depiction, Photography, Value TheoryTagged depiction, expression, facial expression, photography, portraitLeave a comment

The Functions of Portraiture

Posted on November 27, 2017June 26, 2025 by Simon Fokt

Summary: Posits that aesthetic value has only rarely been the primary inspiration in the commissioning, display, and reception of portraits. Discusses the different functions that portraits and portrait collections have fulfilled. Includes sections on the portrait as biography, the portrait as document, the portrait as proxy and gift, the portrait as commemoration and memorial, the portrait as political tool.

Posted in Aesthetic Representation, Aesthetics, Depiction, History of Western Philosophy, Value TheoryTagged depiction, portrait, representationLeave a comment

Gender and Portraiture

Posted on November 27, 2017June 26, 2025 by Simon Fokt

Summary: The gender of both artist and sitter needs to be taken into account when considering the history of portraiture. Explores how and why women were often portrayed in certain roles (as goddesses, historical or religious figures, allegorical embodiments of abstract notions). Discusses why many women artists before the 20th century were portraitists and considers a few examples. Also highlights changing notions of masculinity in portraiture.

Posted in Aesthetic Representation, Aesthetics, Depiction, Gender and Equality, Philosophy of Gender, Philosophy of Gender Race and Sexuality, Value TheoryTagged depiction, gender, portrait, representation, stereotypingLeave a comment

Identities: Feminism, Multiculturalism, Sexuality

Posted on November 27, 2017June 26, 2025 by Simon Fokt

Summary: Goldberg provides a richly illustrated historical account of the intimate connection between identity and performance art. Starting from the feminist art of the 1960’s, the recognition and assertion of identity was a fundamental bid for social visibility. The next frontier was social recognition, which concerned ethnic and sexual minorities as much as it did women. The final frontier – political equality – is one that is still out of reach. Still, according to Goldberg, performance art continues to chart new territories of identification. In fact, while at the outset performance art used early feminist writing as inspiration, Goldberg recognizes a gradual reversal – today’s feminists are as likely to chart new philosophical directions as they are to follow the exploratory charge of their performance art counterparts.

Posted in Aesthetics, Aesthetics and Culture, Feminist Aesthetics, Philosophy of Gender Race and Sexuality, Value TheoryTagged feminism, identity, performance artLeave a comment

Antagonism and Relational Aesthetics

Posted on November 27, 2017May 13, 2025 by Simon Fokt

Summary: Bishop offers a critique of “relational aesthetics” – an approach to installation art that originated in the 1990’s and whose main proponent and interpreter was Nicolas Bourriaud. Bourriaud’s chief claim is that the art movement in question promotes intersubjective relationships (between artist and audience members and among audience members alike) and privileges social and political cohesion over other possible aspects of the aesthetic experience. While Bishop finds this ethos applicable to the work of the artists Bourriaud chooses to discuss (Rikrit Tiravanija, Liam Gillick etc.), she finds it difficult to reconcile relational aesthetics with the realities and concerns of the larger artworld. Antagonism is for Bishop just as viable a driving force in the making and appreciation of art as are social cohesion and intersubjective togetherness. Furthermore, as the history of early performance art and its reception shows, what makes art difficult, and thus politically important, is precisely the tensions that the makers and theorists of relational aesthetics attempt to quell.

Posted in Aesthetic Interpretation, Aesthetics, Art and Artworks, Value TheoryTagged art appreciation, installation art, performance art, relational aestheticsLeave a comment

‘Do Not Do Unto Others…’ Cultural Misrecognition and the Harms of Appropriation in an Open-Source World

Posted on November 27, 2017May 13, 2025 by Simon Fokt

Abstract: In this chapter we explore two important questions that we believe should be central to any discussion of the ethics and politics of cultural heritage: What are the harms associated with appropriation and commodification, specifically where the heritage of Indigenous peoples is concerned? And how can these harms best be avoided? Archaeological concerns animate this discussion; we are ultimately concerned with fostering postcolonial archaeological practices. But we situate these questions in a broader context, addressing them as they arise in connection with the appropriation of Indigenous cultural heritage, both past and present.

Posted in Philosophy of Archaeology, Philosophy of Social Science, Science Logic & MathematicsTagged commodification, cultural appropriation, cultural heritage, misrepresentationLeave a comment

Do Subaltern Artifacts Belong in Art Museums?

Posted on November 27, 2017May 13, 2025 by Simon Fokt

Summary: Eaton and Gaskell argue that museums are “instruments of power,” and then ask whether it is permissible for them to display the cultural heritage of peoples who have been subordinated. Ultimately, they argue that despite a series of arguments to the contrary, the display of “subaltern” artifacts is not just permissible, “but advantageous to all interested parties.” They make the argument by posing and responding to four central objections to this position.

Posted in Applied Ethics, Value TheoryTagged cultural heritageLeave a comment

The Properties of Culture and the Politics of Possessing Identity: Native Claims in the Cultural Appropriation Controversy.

Posted on November 27, 2017May 13, 2025 by Simon Fokt

Abstract: The West has created categories of property, including intellectual property, which divides peoples and things according to the same colonizing discourses of possessive individualism that historically disentitled and disenfranchised Native peoples in North America. These categories are often presented as one or both of neutral and natural, and often racialized. The commodification and removal of land from people’s social relations which inform Western valuations of cultural value and human beings living in communities represents only one particular, partial way of categorizing the world. Legal and cultural manifestations of authorship, culture, and property are contingent upon Enlightenment and Romantic notions built upon a colonial foundation. I will argue that the law rips apart what First Nations peoples view as integrally and relationally joined, but traditional Western understandings of culture, identity, and property are provoked, challenged, and undermined by the concept of Aboriginal Title in a fashion that is both necessary and long overdue.

Posted in Applied Ethics, Philosophy of Law, Property Rights, Social and Political Philosophy, Value TheoryTagged authorship, colonialism, cultural appropriation, cultural property, intellectual property, law, raceLeave a comment

Aboriginal Painting: Identity and Authenticity

Posted on November 27, 2017May 13, 2025 by Simon Fokt

Summary: Coleman argues for an ontological understanding of Australian Aboriginal artworks (namely, that they function as insignia that require authoritative endorsement) that can resolve disputes about the authenticity of controversial cases of Aboriginal art. More broadly, her article illuminates the ways in which viewing art as part of a cultural heritage can affect how we understand its authenticity.

Posted in Aesthetics, Ontology of art, Painting and Drawing, Value TheoryTagged authenticity, cultural appropriation, cultural heritage, non-Western art, ontology of art, paintingLeave a comment

A Philosophical Perspective on the Ethics and Resolution of Cultural Property Issues

Posted on November 27, 2017June 26, 2025 by Simon Fokt

Summary: Warren’s chapter offers a careful and systematic look at arguments concerning what she calls “the 3 R’s”: restitution (or repatriation) of cultural property, restrictions on cultural imports and exports, and the rights (to ownership, access, etc.) over cultural property. She ultimately argues that this framework should be overturned in favor of an approach to cultural property disputes that is modeled on conflict resolution. This approach deprioritizes traditional talk of property and ownership in favor of a focus on preservation.

Posted in Applied Ethics, Property Rights, Social and Political Philosophy, Value TheoryTagged cultural property, property, repatriation, restitutionLeave a comment

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Keywords

abortion art art classification autonomy causation Chinese philosophy colonialism Confucianism consciousness consent culture depiction desire disability equality ethics experimental philosophy feminism feminist philosophy fiction free will gender identity imagination justice Kant knowledge language logic methodology mind models oppression perception portrait race racism rationality Rawls representation responsibility science sex truth virtue

Figures

Anita Silvers Aristotle bell hooks Charles W. Mills Confucius David Hume David Lewis Delia Graff Fara Elisabeth von Böhmen Emilie Du Châtelet Friedrich Nietzsche G. E. Anscombe Georg Hegel Gottfried Leibniz Gottlob Frege Immanuel Kant Iris Marion Young Iris Murdoch Jennifer Jackson John Rawls Judith Jarvis Thomson Karl Marx Laozi Margaret Cavendish Mary Astell Mary Hesse Mary Midgley Maurice Merleau-Ponty Michel Foucault Pamela Sue Anderson Paul Grice Philippa Foot Plato René Descartes Rudolf Carnap Simone Weil Soran Reader Susan Hurley Val Plumwood Viola Cordova W. V. O. Quine Wilma Mankiller Xuanzang Zhuangzi Zhu Xi

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