In philosophical aesthetics, there has been a recent turn towards what is
called “philosophy of the arts.” The assumption underlying this development
is that, if we want to acquire philosophical insight into the arts, we must do
justice not merely to the ways in which they resemble one another but also
to the ways in which they differ. This is not to say that there is no longer a
place for general theorizing about what artworks in general are or what their
appreciation involves. But we must also be sensitive to the different ways
in which such issues are inflected in different art forms. As we move away
from general theory, however, we need to determine which ways of grouping
the arts are likely to prove most fruitful if our explorations of similarity and
difference are to prove illuminating. To take one example, photography is
in one sense a sister art of cinema – we have moving and still images that
rely on the same general technology. But in another sense it is a sister art of
painting – they both present the eye with a still image, share an interest in
portraiture and have histories that intersect in complex ways.
The place of the performing arts in this new philosophical landscape is
interesting, for the very notion of “the performing arts” already imposes a
structure on the arts. The things usually grouped under this label – music,
dance, and drama – are in some ways strikingly different. For example, they
seem to appeal to different cognitive capacities and different senses. We think
of music as primarily a heard art, dance as primarily a seen art, and drama,
at least as traditionally viewed, as the visual presentation of a narrative that
speaks more to the understanding than to the senses. What, then, links these
arts? Most obviously, it is the activities of performers through which works
are realized for our appreciation. It is not surprising, then, that it is the
notion of artistic performance that poses the most distinctive philosophical
questions about the performing arts.
What is surprising, however, is that few attempts have been made to
systematically study these questions as they apply to the performing arts as
a whole. Rather, most philosophical inquiry bearing on the performing arts
has concerned itself exclusively or primarily with music. There has been a
Preface and
Acknowledgments
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