ansell-pearson1994 (1)

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444 Book Reviews This is not a consistently easy book to read. There are some delightful stories in its earlier historical parts-and in particular where the ‘orality’ of Vito’s intellectual context is discussed: but the later more theoretical sections can be somewhat unrelenting. Nevertheless, the work constitutes an impressive synthesis; it is excellently structured, and clearly-written; and every attempt is made to help the reader through some difficult, but illuminating and intellectually-suggestive material. Furthermore, with its own exemplary repudiation of disciplinary boundaries and its aspiration to respond to contemporary relativism, it is also potentially of enormous practical consequence. Beverley Southgate University of Hertfordshire Aesthetics and Subjectivity: From Kant to Nietzsche, Andrew Manchester University Bowie (Manchester: Press, 1990), vii + 284 pp., 835.00 H.B. Anyone who has been observing recent philosophical developments will have noticed that an ‘aestheticist’ turn has taken place. This turn has a great deal to do with the fate of both philosophy and politics in our time and with the sense that we are living in a ‘post’ age: post-philosophical, post-modern, and post-political even. The aestheticism which characterises so much philosophical thinking at present-I am thinking, for example, of the work of thinkers as diverse as Jean Baudrillard, Jean-Francois, Richard Rorty, and Gianni Vattimo-rests on an abandonment of ‘strong’ metaphysics, in which there is belief in things like Truth and Reason, in favour of what Vattimo has usefully called ‘weak thought’, a style of thinking which affirms a ftctionalised account and experience of reality. Andrew Bowie’s book seeks to showthat much recent philosophical thought represents a re-tracing of key debates and developments which took place in the nineteenth century in the wake of Kant and his failure to resolve the antinomies of reason. As is well-known, after an initial scepticism about the application of the word ‘aesthetics’ to the domain of ‘taste’ (the term originally designated the area of epistemological inquiry concerned with principles of sensuousness), Kant took up the work of Alexander Baumgarten on ‘aesthetica’ (1750 and 1758), and attempted to unify theoretical and practical reason through a ‘critique’ of judgement. Bowie sees his telling of the story of how aesthetics and subjectivity became entwined in modern German philosophy-‘from’ Kant ‘to’ Nietzsche-not as an arcane exercise, but as one which has great contemporary importance. In this claim, I think he is right. He offers a rich and remarkably lucid account of the work of a group of thinkers whose work reveals a preoccupation with the theme of the book. There are generous chapters on figures whose work is often neglected and little understood in the English-speaking world, such as Fichte, &helling, and Schliermacher, as well as on more widely-discussed figures such as Hegel, Schopenhauer, and Nietzsche. For Bowie, the centrality of aesthetics within modern philosophy, which is now being repeated in our own post-modem time, is to be understood in terms of the crisis of is brought about as a result of metaphysics-of truth, reason, freedom, God, etc. -which the Cartesian and Kantian revolutions. In turn, the work of Descartes and Kant reflects real and profound changes in the social sphere: the demise of the theological world-view, the rise of anthropocentrism, the development of capitalism, and so on. These developments give rise to a crisis of ‘subjectivity’, which is essentially a legitimation crisis (a crisis of authority). If the ancient theological picture is no longer tenable, then on what
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Book Reviews 44s basis can the human subject establish the validity of its truth-claims about nature, the universe, humanity, and so on? How can we know that our judgements-whether they be epistemological, moral, or aesthetic-possess the status of apodictic certainty and universality? It is at this (modern) point that philosophy becomes foundational and inaugural, preoccupied with tribunals of reason and epistemological/hermeneutic circles. Aesthetics, as a distinct branch of philosophy, has become important for modern thought for a number of reasons. I will mention a few of the examples Bowie gives. Aesthetics, which is not simply to be equated with Plato’s view of beauty as the symbol of the good, is a reminder that there are other ways of seeing nature and the world which result in experiences qualitatively different from the dominant technocratic and instrumentalist modes of ‘seeing’ which govern modern culture (to appreciate an object aesthetically is to appreciate it without regard for its usefulness or exchange value). Aesthetics throws into relief, in a stark and instructive manner, the problem of establishing the relationship between universal and particular, which was of such concern to modern German thought (e.g. how can philosophy, which is concerned with concepts, abstractly grasp the particular without abolishing its value as the particular?). Finally, an aesthetic appreciation of nature and the world can help promote ecological awareness since it shows human beings how to view the universe non-anthropocentrically and to value nature in an intrinsic manner. The research the author has carried out for this book is of a high scholarly standard, and the presentation is both accessible and engaging. Some of the discussion I found a little too superficial (e.g. the chapter on Nietzsche), and the concluding reflections, in which Adorn0 is pitted favourably against the ‘obscurantist’ Heidegger, did not convince me. Nevertheless, this is a first-rate piece of work which has an important story to tell. It will undoubtedly inspire further work in this vitally important area of philosophy. Keith Ansell-Pearson University of Warwick Crossings: the Great Transatlantic Migrations, 1870-1914, Walter Nugent (Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 1992), 256 pp., 16 b&w photos, 23 tables, 11 maps, $29.95. In one slim volume, Walter Nugent synthesises the vast scholarship on transatlantic migration between 1870 and 1914 to provide a compelling way of thinking about this dramatic movement of people. By considering the various ‘donor countries’ in Europe as well as multiple ‘receiving countries’ in the Americas, Nugent shows convincingly that Europeans migrated in these decades much as they had for centuries within Europe. Steamships, of course, greatly facilitated their migration to and from destinations in the Western Hemisphere, but Europeans migrated to the Americas in the late-nineteenth century for the same reasons they had moved between countries in Europe before then: in the hope of improving their material existence. Crossings is divided into three major sections. The first is devoted to the Atlantic world of the late-nineteenth century-’ its demographic characteristics and typical patterns of migration. Nugent reveals a world in which regional differences abounded. He uses that regional diversity to test the assumptions made in modernisation theory, which has been the chief paradigm employed in the analysis of late-nineteenth-century immigration. Nugent demonstrates persuasively that none of the countries in the Atlantic world conformed to the usual pattern of modemisation: traditional populations maintained by both high fertility and mortality rates followed by a decline in mortality, population