aesthetics

Type: 
Topical Term
Subfield: 
a
Alias: 
aesthetics

Your brain on art

how the arts transform us
2023
"Have you ever gotten chills while listening to a particularly gorgeous piece of music? Or felt a sense of calm while gazing at a painting of a serene landscape? We have experiences like those every day, but rarely stop to consider what's happening internally to cause them. [The authors] explain how, by understanding how we biologically react to aesthetic experiences, we can not only heal as individuals but thrive as communities. Using the new science of neuroaesthetics, which explores our physiological reactions to art, Magsamen and Ross show us how, for instance, gardening can help a person heal from trauma or listening to a major fifth interval can snap the body out of a fight-or-flight response. Beyond enjoyment and abstraction, art can change the way we operate on a daily, practical level. And, in addition to helping each of us heal from stress, anxiety, burnout, and other malaises of modern life, neuroaesthetics can effect major change in society writ large, whether through public art murals in high-crime areas or music and dance therapy for patients experiencing neurodegenerative disorders"--Provided by publisher.

Ugly-Cute

What Misunderstood Animals Can Teach Us About Life
2022
"A . . . compilation of misunderstood, underappreciated species including well-known lovable uggos, like sun bears and pugs, as well as obscure weirdos, like the star-nosed mole and the aye-aye. Each chapter is dedicated to a different ugly-cute animal and the ways in which we can learn from them"--Provided by publisher.

This beauty

a philosophy of being alive
"Say you are afraid of heights. Very afraid. And say your friend is pressuring you to go sky diving with them. You're wavering, and they deliver a rousing speech about taking the opportunities you're offered. They tell you, Come on, you only live once! You relent. Why? In This Beauty, philosopher Nick Riggle investigates the things we say to inspire each other and ourselves: seize the day, treat yourself, you only live once. Riggle calls them existential imperatives, and they present a conundrum. Their meanings are at best vague, at worst stupid. They're as likely to encourage you to ride down a steep hill in a shopping cart as to marry the love of your life. They imply that you should do something wild with your life because your life is precious, which is a little like saying you should go swimming with your grandfather's watch because it is irreplaceable. And yet these exhortations can't help but be profound. We didn't choose to live this life, in this body, in these conditions. But when we consider the thought that we have only one life, that time is fleeting, or that we might die tomorrow, we often feel a tinge of inspiration, a sense of urgency. We want to embrace the life we were unwittingly given. Drawing on insights from his field of aesthetics and from his own experiences as a professional skater, an academic, and a new father, Riggle considers how they force us to confront what it means to live a worthwhile life. Existential imperatives shock us out of our predictable lives, he argues, and remind us that we aren't bound to the same thing every day, forever. Insightful and deeply humane, This Beauty offers a personal and searching inquiry into the mystery of life's beauty"--.

Easy Beauty

a Memoir
2022
"A philosophy professor and freelance journalist born with a rare congenital condition which affects both her stature and gait discusses how she has navigated a world that both judges and pities her for her appearance"--BTCat.

Liberated threads

Black women, style, and the global politics of soul
Explores the style, beauty, and culture of black women through the decades, and their search for voice, liberation, and identity through fashion choices.

Glory

magical visions of black beauty
2020
Presents a collection of over one hundred photographs and essays that looks at black culture.

This book is cute!

"Information about why certain people, animals and things are considered 'cute' and the scientific background, for children"--Provided by publisher.
Cover image of This book is cute!

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taste in an age of endless choice
2017
A look into consumer behavior and the psychological factors of marketing, revealing how our buying preferences for food, film, and hobbies are constantly shaped by underlying forces.
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This book is cute!

2019
"Information about why certain people, animals and things are considered 'cute' and the scientific background, for children"--Provided by publisher.
Cover image of This book is cute!

The power of cute

Explores the idea and power of "cuteness" from a philosophical standpoint, discussing why we have the "cute" response when we see certain things and not others, and warns against a culture that values cuteness and childishness above other things.
Cover image of The power of cute

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