HEGEL AND AESTHETICS, edited by William Maker. Albany: State University
of New York Press, 2000, 209pp.
"Is Hegel's philosophy of art dead?" asks William Maker in his editorial
introduction to Hegel and Aesthetics — a collection of
essays presented originally at the Fourteenth Biennial (1996) Meeting
of the Hegel Society of America. Maker believes that Hegel's aesthetics
is worthy of rejuvenation, owing to its systematic and theoretical grounding
upon the ever-important concept of freedom, and in light of Hegel's recognition
that art has a practical and potentially educative role in the realization
of freedom. The twelve essays in this volume intend to advance a greater
appreciation of Hegel's aesthetics, and they address a diversity of issues,
the critical mass of which considers the contemporary relevance of Hegel's
aesthetics.
Robert Wicks
Department of Philosophy
The University of Auckland
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