Skip to content Skip to sidebar Skip to footer

[Download] "Radical Aesthetics: Arundhati Roy's Ecology of Style" by Ariel * eBook PDF Kindle ePub Free

Radical Aesthetics: Arundhati Roy's Ecology of Style

📘 Read Now     📥 Download


eBook details

  • Title: Radical Aesthetics: Arundhati Roy's Ecology of Style
  • Author : Ariel
  • Release Date : January 01, 2009
  • Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines,Books,Professional & Technical,Education,
  • Pages : * pages
  • Size : 92 KB

Description

In "The End of the Imagination" Arundhati Roy frames her protest against globalization as a defence of aesthetics. She contrasts global development and nuclear proliferation with an alternative--beauty. "There is beauty yet in this brutal, damaged world of ours," she writes. "Hidden, fierce, immense. Beauty that is uniquely ours and beauty that we have received with race from others, enhanced, reinvented, and made our own. We have to seek it out, nurture it, love it" (Cost 123). Roy uses affective terms, portraying those who resist technocracy as protectively maternal, rather than as critically distanced. And although she depicts resistance as a collective enterprise--this is "our own beauty"--her description evokes the intersubjective but private encounter between mother and child, not the publicity of protest. Roy invokes an embodied, affective experience only to rehire its political efficacy. But while her own stance straddles the two positions, she depicts them as separate modes of thought--politics and aesthetics. Because her political claims depend on an assertion of aesthetics as a separate sphere, Roy's work offers an opportunity to evaluate the relevance of aesthetics to the overtly political intersection of postcolonial, anti-globalization, and environmentalist writing. Advocacy of aesthetic autonomy raises immediate concerns in a post-colonial context. For one, if the aesthetic has primarily affective, subjective resonance, does it imply nostalgia for "pre-theoretical innocence" (Armstrong 2) or initiate a retreat from political discourse? (Roy's preference for protesting "empire" rather than "globalization" might suggest that she rejects the evolution of the discourse, at the very least. (1)) Does the concept of aesthetic pleasure invoke naive subjectivism and ignore the cultural and discursive forces that shape subjectivity? Such privileging of subjective experience might permit the renewal of cultural essentialism and self-exoticization (Massumi 2), which postcolonial studies long worked to critique. Moreover, separating aesthetics and politics might reinforce "binarized, highly moralistic allegories of the subversive versus the hegemonic, resistance versus power" (Sedgwick 100) that valorize experiences associated with powerlessness without posing solutions. (2) But finally, if the purpose of positioning aesthetics as in dialogue with and yet fundamentally separate from political discourse is to find a source of affective solidarity among the oppressed, it is worth examining whether the re-emergence of aesthetics can usefully alter the terms of political engagement.


Free Download "Radical Aesthetics: Arundhati Roy's Ecology of Style" PDF ePub Kindle