@book{35c9c76aac8a4e19bd7fa9c25f9d3465,
title = "A Rhetoric of Aesthetic Power: Moving Forms",
abstract = "This book offers a theory of those formal properties of art that are apt to afford strong aesthetic experience – a project resembling Aristotle{\textquoteright}s in the Poetics, where he analysed structures in tragedies that condition the “peculiar pleasure” of tragedy. However, the book{\textquoteright}s scope cuts across all genres of literature and also includes classical music – the formal art par excellence. Drawing on a wide array of recent theoretical work and empirical evidence, the book closely analyses dozens of examples of both art forms. Besides Aristotle, major inspiration comes from two modern master thinkers: the linguist Roman Jakobson, who defined the “poetic function” of language, and the rhetorician Kenneth Burke, who proposed a “psychological” concept of form. Throughout, the book argues for aesthetic experience as an end in itself and a component of quality of life, one to which everyone should have access – rather than just a means to other ends.",
keywords = "Faculty of Humanities, aestheics, rhetoric, aesthetic experience, literature, music, aristotle, Jakobson, Roman, Burke, Kenneth, equivalence, ambivalence, sign relations",
author = "Kock, {Christian Erik J}",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.1007/978-3-031-68970-3",
language = "English",
isbn = "9783031689697",
series = "Rhetoric, Politics and Society",
publisher = "Palgrave Macmillan",
address = "United Kingdom",
}