Aesthetic Investigations (Jul 2015)

The Aesthetic Experience of the Literary Artwork: A Matter of Form and Content?

  • Leen Verheyen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4013388
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. 1

Abstract

Read online

Ever since the introduction of aesthetics in philosophy, the literary arts have posed a challenge to common notions of aesthetic experience. In this paper, I will focus on the problems that arise when a formalist approach to aesthetics is confronted with literature. My main target is Peter Kivy's ‘essay in literary aesthetics’ Once-Told Tales, in which Kivy defends formalism and concludes from this approach that literature is a non-aesthetic art form. Contrary to Kivy, I will claim that we have good reasons to consider literature an aesthetic art form and, therefore, that the literary arts naturally pose a challenge to formalism. By showing the inextricable intertwining of form and content in literary artworks, I will demonstrate that the identification of so-called aesthetic properties with purely formal properties of a literary artwork is problematic.

Keywords