This is one of the papers from our 2017 Annual Conference, the Future of Phenomenology. Information and the full conference booklet can be found at www.britishphenomenology.org.uk
I compare how two leading French phenomenologists of the last century – Michel Henry and Henri Maldiney – interpret Kandinsky’s heritage. Henry’s phenomenology is based on a distinction between two main modes of manifestation – the ordinary one, that is, the manifestation of the world and the “manifestation of life”; for him Kandinsky’s work provides a paradigmatic example of the second, more original, mode of manifestation, which is free from all forms of self-alienation. This is why Kandinsky’s paintings do no show us anything, but rather provoke in us certain impressions, certain feelings; they should be experienced, lived through. Henry claims that this living-though of the work of art is transformative; it is a kind of ascetic practice or mystical experience that goes beyond the distinction of the subject and the object. Maldiney also recognises in Kandinsky’s work an attempt to provide an access to an a-cosmic and a-historic experience of one’s inner self; yet for Maldiney this is not a positive characteristic. For Maldiney, the key distinction is not between modes of phenomenalisation, but between two dimensions of meaning (sens): the ordinary one, that he calls “gnostic” (gnosique), and “pathic”. This pathic dimension of meaning can be reached only in a personal contact with the living-world in its nascent state. According to Maldiney, there is no radical self-transformation which is not a transformation of one’s being-in- the-world and one’s meaning of the world (and vice versa). My access to myself cannot bypass my relation to the world, and so Kandinsky’s paintings cannot induce a true transformation of self. The disagreement of Henry and Maldiney on Kandinsky doesn’t unfold on the level of the phenomenological description of the concrete aesthetic experience, but rather on the level of metaphysics.
Mariia Galkina - 'Towards a phenomenology of environmental shame'
Paul Tuppeny - '“I didn't want their past to be a mark on them.”(R. Rauschenberg): A Sculptor's Investigation into the Phenomena of Objective Age'
Adam Takacs - 'Ageing Being: Temporality, Corporeality, and Shared World'
Gage Krause - 'Desynchronization, Alienation, and the Social World in Grief'
Ronja Griep - 'When Does Bodily Shame Turn Unjust? The Case of Menstrual Shame'
Oskar Otto Frohn - 'Shame and Depression – A Phenomenological Qualitative Exploration of Shame in Depression'
Emily Hughes - '"Heavier, and less mine": grief and the modification of bodily experience'
Pat McConville - 'Phenomenology and Artificial Hearts: Three scales of temporal change'
Penelope Lusk - '“It said the quiet part out loud”: Reshaping Shame in the #MedBikini Twitter Movement'
Janna van Grunsven - 'Reimagining Embodied Well-Being: Quasi-Cartesianism, Crip Technoscience & 4E Cognition'
Michael Greer - 'On Oscillating Between Fatness and Thinness in a Fatphobic World: Weight-Cycling, Apprehensive Perception, and the Body You Might Have'
Bence Marosan - 'Towards a Phenomenological Theory of Animal Emotions. A Husserlian Perspective'
Joe MacDonagh - 'Daseinic elements of the ethicality of nursing practice'
Tristan Hedges - 'Towards a phenomenology of discrimination'
Knowles & Melo Lopes - 'How to Dress Like a Feminist'
Pritchard & Tovey - 'Ecophenomenological Perspectives on Human Augmentation'
Maxim Miroshnichenko - 'The Painful Incorporation: Hybrid Intercorporeality in the Case of Dialysis and Chronic Kidney Disease'
Liesbeth Schoonheim - 'Posters, protests, and reclaiming the streets'
Eugenia Stefanello - 'Empathy, Narrative Medicine, and (Mis)Representation of Illness: A Phenomenological Perspective'
Joshua Bergamin - 'When is ‘my truth' true? Interpreting lived experience in phenomenological interviews'
Join Podbean Ads Marketplace and connect with engaged listeners.
Advertise Today
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
In the Great Khan’s Tent
Visualize Meditations
The No-Frills Teacher Podcast
The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast
The Mel Robbins Podcast