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The Future of Art
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02 September 1999

Draws upon a wide range of aesthetic theories and artworks in order to challenge the view that art is valueless or purely subjective.
By analyzing the three loci of aesthetics-the subjective, the objective, and the absolute-the author concludes that only the sublime demonstrates that art is neither subjective nor objective. The one essential component of art is the new, the sole "instrument" that can guarantee art's vitality even when confronted by the nihilistic tendencies of modernity.
"The originality of this work, its broad scope, and the author's familiarity with the work of contemporary European and American aestheticians and philosophers make this work a valuable asset to those interested in aesthetics." — symplokeu
"I like the introduction of the idea of the sublime as a crucial factor in art, which then allows the author to criticize Nietzsche's nihilism. The book has the courage to object to several 'politically correct' views of art: art as purely subjective, art as style, art as valueless and thus part of the nihilist movement." — Wilfried Ver Eecke, Georgetown University
"The author knowledgeably discusses an extremely wide range both of aesthetic theories spanning continental and 'analytic' traditions and of art works from antiquity to the most recent postmodern experiments. She addresses many of the most important issues in aesthetic theory and she writes with consummate style. Although the literature in aesthetics is vast, Goldsmith's book manages to address a wider array of aesthetic theory than other contemporary accounts." — Richard Dien Winfield, author of Stylistics: Rethinking the Artforms After Hegel
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part One
The Historical Side of Aesthetics
Chapter 1
The Birth of Aesthetics
Art on the Offensive; The Role of Imagination; Self-transcendence; Desire's Ignorance; Faust, Never Lost in Desire; Desiring the Will; The Despairing Will
Chapter 2
Art as the Organon of Philosophy
Real/Ideal; Salvific Intuition; Myths versus Mysticism; After Schelling; Prosaic Myths; Art's Futurity; The Necessity of Art
Chapter 3
Philosophy as the Organon of Art
Sic Transit; Hegel's Triptychs; Beauty Surpassed; The Ultimate Rationality; Myths and the Symbol; The Symbolic Sublime; The Circle; Conclusion
Part Two
Art's New Truth
Chapter 4
Apprehending the New
The Subject Transformed; The Hidden Truth; Philosophic Art and Aesthetics; The Emerging Meaning; The Function of Art; Neutrality; Art as the Organon ofArt
Chapter 5
From Artifice to the Will
Art Uprooted from Truth; Nietzsche's Appearance; Expected Tragedies; Rhetoric First; Being and Art: The Axis Nietzsche-Heidegger; Art: The Truth of the Nonexistent; The Sublimity of Nihilism
Chapter 6
The Nothingness of Art
The Repercussions of Nihilism; Utopia and Nihilism: The Two Faces of the Aesthetic; Renouncing the Beautiful; Unprecedented Form; Metaphor; Sublime Allegory; The Aesthetics of Negativity; Conclusion
Part Three
Subjective Aesthetics
Chapter 7
The Role of Subjectivity
Art: Imagining the True; New Sensations; Hermeneutics; The Unconscious Subject; The Ineffable; Tragedy and Comedy; Sublime Sublimity; Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index