What is the nature and meaning of the ‘aesthetic’? This question animates Jane Forsey’s provocative dive into the foundations of philosophical aesthetics. The result is a compelling new theory of aesthetic experience that draws upon attention, judgement and value as central to our responses to the world we encounter.
We liberally apply ‘aesthetic’ to a wealth of experiences from horror movies, fashion and perfume to food, fine art and gardening. But underlying our use is a long-standing commitment to the centrality of pleasure. Forsey reveals why traditional aesthetic theories find it difficult to include experiences of the negative—the ugly, the fearsome, the grotesque, the banal— and exposes their inability to adequately reflect the multiplicity of ways we can experience the world.
Through an entertaining analysis of major themes and the latest debates around realism, value empiricism, and the everyday, Forsey argues that a connection to positive valuation severely restricts the kinds of things that can be counted as justifiably aesthetic. She introduces us to the notion of ‘discordant aesthetics’ and encourages us to incorporate experiences of ugliness, disorder and incoherence as legitimate forms of aesthetic engagement.
This is a call for the discipline to broaden its range and uncouple the aesthetic from its positive connotations. Forsey's fresh perspective on the fundamental question of 'what is the aesthetic?' shows us a more consistent, coherent way of articulating the experiences in our lives.
The Aesthetic Question
Jane Forsey
A compelling new interpretation of the aesthetic experience that draws upon attention, judgement and value as central to our responses to the world we encounter.Rights Sold
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Book Details
Imprint: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication Date: 27-11-2025
Format: Paperback | 216 x 138mm | 224 pagesAbout the Author
Jane Forsey is Professor in the Department of Philosophy at the University of Winnipeg, Canada. She is the author of The Aesthetics of Design (2016), as well as numerous articles in philosophical aesthetics. Her work has been widely translated.
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