1st Edition

The Social Value of Art A Psychological and Linguistic Approach to an Understanding of Art Activity

By F.R. O'Neill Copyright 1939
    234 Pages
    by Routledge

    The Social Value of Art (1939) is a thorough examination of art activity, using the knowledge of the workings of the mind and of the attractions of pleasure. It helps us understand the arts through an analysis which goes to the root of our ways of thinking and feeling.

    Part 1. The Place of Art Activity in the Structure of Human Life  1. The Nature and Context of the Subject  2. How the Influence of Art May Operate  3. ‘Art for Art’s Sake’  4. Emotional Life  5. The Special Necessity of Art to Modern Life  6. The Two Ways in Which the Values of Works of Art May Be Considered  7. A Psychological Theory of Value  Part 2. Technical and Other Aspects of Art Activity  8. How to Answer the Question ‘What is Art?’  9. The Nature of Experience  10. Art as Communication of Experience  11. Art Processes  12. The Place of Pleasure and Beauty in an Estimation of Art Values  13. Examples in Poetry and Prose of an Artist’s Expressive and Communicative Gifts  14. General Considerations  Part 3. Some Relevant Questions  15. An Analysis of Some Objections to ‘Art Theory’  16. ‘Impersonal’ Judgement  17. The Linguistic Aspect of Discussion  18. Censorship

    Biography

    F.R. O'Neill