Ethics and the Arts: An Anthology

Pirmais vāks
David E. W. Fenner
Taylor & Francis, 1995 - 323 lappuses

The aim of this series is to make available texts and collections of essays on major moral issues. The present volume is a collection that focuses exclusively on diverse moral issues connected with the arts: censorship and subsidy, authenticity and ownership, and the connections between moral and aesthetic values and evaluative judgments. The collection is not only unique, but timely. It appears in a period when the National Endowment for the Arts is under fire and the government's role in the arts is a hotly debated political issue, when the connection between moral or political content in art and its aesthetic value remains at the forefront of debate in aesthetics, and when ownership and commercialization of artworks continue to exercise the sociology of art.

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Introduction
1
Art and Censorship 29
29
Art and Inauthenticity
77
Forging Issues from Forged Art
97
No Dance Is a Fake
115
Why Artworks Have No Right to Have Rights
143
A Defense of Colorization
163
Can Government Funding of the Arts
201
The Problem
219
Should the Government Subsidize the Arts?
249
Art in a Free Society
261
The Interrelationship of Moral
303
Contributors
319
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