NEO-BAROQUE AESTHETICS AND CONTEMPORARY ENTERTAINMENT, by Angela Ndalianis.
Cambridge, MA, and London: MIT Press, 2004, 323 pp., $34.95 cloth.
Like the cliché about not judging a book by its cover, the prominence
of the term "aesthetics" in a book's title is no indication of what one
will find inside. Has the term become so elastic that it will now cover
everything cultural? Or is it the case, as in Angela Ndalianis's discussions
of theme park rides and computer games, that the term applies to anything
that has a parallel in earlier practices covered by this rubric? Ndalianis
may be stretching it too far, for the book in question emphasizes parallels
with baroque practices that predate Alexander Baumgarten's 1735 proposal
to use "aesthetics" as the name of an emerging discipline concerned informed
that the book explores the poetics, semiotics, and the "logic of contemporary
media." But because Ndalianis holds that recent visual media involve a
"specific system of perception" that arises from a "radical cultural transformation"
(22-23), the term "aesthetics" may be as good as any other in conveying
her purposes. For she is not concerned with artistic style—presumably
the province of art historians. She is theorizing broadly about visual
media by examining an assortment of media strategies found in the two
eras and aims to identify their common "morphology" (19). Her sources
are Fredric Jameson, Walter Benjamin, and Gilles Deleuze rather than,
say, Kendall Walton, Noël Carroll, or Gregory Currie.
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