Aesthetic Realism taught me to ask this great question: How is aesthetics present in the ordinary moments of our lives—not only when we're at a museum or gallery, but also when we're on the subway, cooking a meal, choosing what to wear, thinking about the galaxies or about love? That's what the present blog is about.
Tuesday, August 15, 2006
Ellen Reiss, on Robert Burns and justice to working people
How should working people, and the work they do, be seen? Aesthetic Realism explains that work is an aesthetic situation--a putting together of an individual person with the outside world--and it should be respected. Yet so many people throughout history, and many, many today, have been and felt disrespected when it comes to work, and have been rightly discontent because of this. In her commentary to the issue of the journal The Right of Aesthetic Realism to Be Known titled "Jobs, Discontent, and Beauty," Ellen Reiss, the Class Chairman of Aesthetic Realism and literary critic, discusses some poems by Robert Burns to show how he objected poetically to the unaesthetic, unjust way working people were seen. She has also written about the work of many other poets, and the aesthetic way they saw the world in their writing. So, there's more to come!