As the theoretical alignments within academia shift; this book introduces a surprising variety of realism to abolish the old positivist-theory dichotomy that has haunted Art History. Demanding frankly the referential detachment of the objects under study; the book proposes a stratified; multi-causal account of art history that addresses postmodern concerns while saving it from its errors of self-refutation. Building from the very basic distinction between intransitive being and transitive knowing; objects can be affirmed as real while our knowledge of them is held to be fallible. Several focused chapters address basic problems while introducing philosophical reflection into art history. These include basic ontological distinctions between society and culture; general and ldquo;specialrdquo; history; the discontinuity of cultural objects; the importance of definition for special history; scales; facets and fiat objects as forms of historical structure; the nature of evidence and proof; historical truth and controversies. Stressing Critical Realism as the stratified; multi-causal approach needed for productive research today in the academy; this book creates the subject of the ontology of art history and sets aside a theoretical space for metaphysical reflection; thus clarifying the usually muddy distinction between theory; methodology; and historiography in art history.
#557123 in eBooks 2013-01-04 2013-01-04File Name: B00AYILMEQ
Review
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Great referenceBy Jo DeanAm using this as a guide as I undertake to learn pattern drafting.4 of 4 people found the following review helpful. Know before you buy.By JanzbooksDO NOT spend your money on this book! It appears to be a partial reprint from some older book and is incomplete. It doesnt tell you how to take body measurements and doesnt tell how the measurements they use in the examples were obtained. The book claims more information is available in chapter 5; but there are no chapters and no information on taking measurements. some pages have numbers; some do not. This is a British publication. Sentence construction and illustrations lead me to believe the original publication may have been in the early 1950s; maybe earlier. Its a small paperback book; 5 1/2 inches by 8 1/2 inches and 3/8 thick. Certainly not worth the asking price. The cover does not match the one shown on . Perhaps the original publication was complete and worth the price; but this reprint is probably not what you want. Had I seen an accurate review; I would not have purchased it.