Critical’ Philosophy of Culture: Actual Contexts and Assemblage Point

2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (3-2) ◽  
pp. 260-289
Author(s):  
Vladimir Martynov ◽  

The annual outbursts of controversy surrounding the presentation of the main film awards of the planet in the last few years (primarily around the Oscars) are important for cultural philosophy because they are indicators of tectonic shifts in the paradigm of modern cultural knowledge. The concept of ‘high’ culture is increasingly losing its ontological significance. Criticism fell upon this concept almost a hundred years ago, but so far this has been a fact of ‘high’ theory. Today, the denial of a ‘high’ culture has become the reality of mass communication. The pressure, which used to be a problem only for academic classrooms, has become an order of magnitude greater. This is the line on which we need a clear accounting of the results, the balance of pro et contra. The answer of the ‘critical’ philosophy is understandable in principle: the contradictions between the ‘high’ and ‘low’ cultures are not an insoluble conflict. The axiom of the death of a ‘high’ culture is incorrect. The modern theory of ‘high’ culture is possible. But its construction is cumbersome and not fast. You need to start by protecting the ‘high’ culture from reproach for violence. The assemblage point of radical criticism of the ‘high’ culture is W. Benjamin’s treatise “A Work of Art in the Era of Its Technical Reproducibility”. Therefore, the defense of ‘high’ culture cannot but begin with an answer to W. Benjamin. At the same time, thinking specifically about this small treatise, we need a careful analysis of the whole structure, the words of Benjamin as a whole. And this word is peculiar. It is thoroughly public and political. Benjamin’s treatise is not a theoretical reflection. This is a manifesto, more precisely, two manifestos. The first is the manifesto of the new Marxism. The second is the manifesto of the artistic avant-garde. Benjamin saw the possibility of synthesizing these two ideologies and gave his model. It turned out, firstly, unfounded, and secondly, it was dangerous. It is dangerous because culture is the main barrier that holds back the advent of utopia. Having destroyed this barrier, we find ourselves defenseless against utopia.

Popular Music ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 77-95 ◽  
Author(s):  
MATTHEW BANNISTER

Indie alternative rock in the 1980s is often presented as authentically autonomous, produced in local scenes, uncaptured by ideology, free of commercial pressures, but also of high culture elitism. In claiming that the music is avant-garde, postmodern and subversive, such accounts simplify indie's historical, social and cultural context. Indie did not simply arise organically out of developing postpunk music networks, but was shaped by media, and was not just collective, but also stratified, hierarchical and traditional. Canon (articulated through practices of archivalism and connoisseurship) is a key means of stratification within indie scenes, produced by and serving particular social and cultural needs for dominant social groups (journalists, scenemakers, tastemakers, etc.). These groups and individuals were mainly masculine, and thus gender in indie scenes is an important means for deconstructing the discourse of indie independence. I suggest re-envisioning indie as a history of record collectors, emphasising the importance of rock ‘tradition’, of male rock ‘intellectuals’, second-hand record shops, and of an alternative canon as a form of pedagogy. I also consider such activities as models of rational organisation and points of symbolic identification.


2016 ◽  
Vol 23 (2) ◽  
pp. 133-142
Author(s):  
Richard Fotheringham

AbstractPat Hanna's Famous Diggers, a professional vaudeville theatre troupe comprising ex-Great War Anzac soldiers (initially, mainly New Zealanders, as Hanna was himself) played for nearly two years (1923–24) at the old Cremorne Theatre in Brisbane. One item Hanna premiered at the Cremorne was Louis XI, a short (ten-minute) comic sketch he wrote himself. Modernism in the inter-war years, given its usual location within avant-garde aesthetics, high culture, internationalism and radical politics, is not — with the notable exception of Brecht's cabaret work in the 1920s — usually associated with popular theatre. While one comic playlet hardly challenges that positioning, Louis XI was a direct result of the Great War's profound reshaping of modern life. Many of the dramatised sketches performed by Hanna's company, including Louis XI, were structured around a contrast between events as they had occurred in the trenches and as they were portrayed in a utopian or dystopian fantasy, sometimes triggered by shell shock or a dream. Several, again including Louis XI, involve the past, and express the curiosity and cultural dislocation Australian- and New Zealand-born soldiers felt as they moved for the first time through real-life landscapes and architecture they had known only from popular history and romance.


Author(s):  
O.Yu. Dorofieieva

Background. In the Ukrainian art history, the problems of theatre criticism and the interrelations between criticism and stage art until remain insufficiently studied. The article considers the activities of the T. Shevchenko Kharkov Theatre (until 1935 – the Theatre «Berezil») in the second half of the 1930s–1940s in the coverage of theatre criticism. Since 1933, the aesthetic course of this theatre had changed dramatically from avant-garde searches to socialist realism in connection with the defeat of the position of Les Kurbas and his dismissal from the theatre. This reversal of the creative course of the theatre becomes a subject of reflection in theatre criticism, which during this period also experienced fundamental transformations both in genre-style and in ideological aspects. Thus, the article analyzes the development of theatre criticism in the context of artistic phenomena of the second half of the 1930s–1940s. Objectives and methodology of the research. The objective of this study is to analyze the difficult period of stylistic changes in the T. Shevchenko Kharkov Theatre in the second half of the 1930s–1940s, that was at the stage of formation of socialist realism in the Ukrainian art, from the viewpoint of theatre criticism of that time. System-historical and comparative-historical methods were used in the study. The results of the study. On the basis of the press reports on the activities of the T. Shevchenko Kharkov Theatre the most important features and tendencies inherent in theatrical criticism of this period have been derived. The article deals with editions, in which during the period under study the materials about the T. Shevchenko Theatre appeared most often. These are, in particular, Kharkov newspapers «Krasnoye Znamia», «Sotsialisticheskaya Kharkovshchina», Kiev editions «Sovetskoye Iskusstvo», «Sovetskaya Ukraina», «Kievskaya Pravda», «Pravda Ukrainy», «Literatura i Iskusstvo», «Komsomolskaya Ukraina», «Proletarskaya Pravda», «Literaturnaya Gazeta». The articles about the tour performances of the T. Shevchenko Kharkov Theatre were published in the editions of other cities, including the newspapers «Bugskaya Zarya» (Nikolaev), «Dnepropetrovskaya Pravda», «Zarya» (Dnepropetrovsk), «Bolshevistskaya Pravda» (Vinnitsa), «Lvovskaya Pravda», «Svobodnaya Ukraina» (Lviv), «Voroshilovgradskaya Pravda» (Luhansk), «Moskovskiy Bolshevik», «Komsomolskaya Pravda», «Trud» (Moscow). Since 1933 the theatre had its own edition – «Berezilets», which in 1935 got a new, ideologically correct name – «Za Sotsialisticheskiy Realizm» («For Socialist Realism»). The article outlines the circle of authors who practiced the theatre criticism professionally. It should be noted that the activities of the T. Shevchenko Kharkov Theatre at that time was often described by journalists who published the notices occasionally. Among those who analyzed the theatrical process systematically, the most attention deserve the following critics: V. Morskoy, L. Livshits, B. Milyavsky, V. Chagovets, Y. Shovkoplyas, G. Gelfandbein, A. Gozenpud, V. Gavrilenko, A. Kostrov, A. Lein, D. Zaslavsky, Ya. Gan, Y. Pavlovsky. The critical notices by writers V. Sukhodolsky, Yu. Martych and L. Dmiterko have been considered separately as examples of a rather original glance at the performances and presence in the text of an expressive author’s style. During this period, under the pressure of strict ideological control over the art, quite stable canons of compiling notices were formed and took root, almost not allowing a critic to display his individuality. Among the features peculiar for the theatre criticism there were the uniformity of the titles of articles simply stating the play name, an extremely rare manifestation of specific position of the author regarding the stage work and transition to the level of figurative or conceptual understanding. The main matter of the analysis was rather the performance content, its subject, but not the means by which it is embodied; more attention was paid to the literary source, and not to the performance. In the first part of the notice, the play subject was usually explained from the standpoint of party ideology, often using the quotes from Soviet leaders’ speeches. Usually in a notice, the close attention was paid to acting and the actors performing the main roles. This peculiarity reflects disclosure of the new facets of talent of a number of actors of the T. Shevchenko Kharkov Theatre of that period. It should be noted that actor’s individuality of I. Maryanenko, V. Chistyakova, M. Krushelnitsky, L. Serdyuk and others was displayed more powerful than in «Berezil». Giving priority to an actor in theatre criticism to a certain extent levelled the producer’s role. At that time, the palette of stage producer’s means should not was to be going beyond strict aesthetic requirements. It was necessary to remain in the stylistic framework of a life-like presentation, when a producer was fully focused on the actors, and M. Krushelnitsky, L. Dubovik, R. Cherkashin and others did it skilfully. The best examples of theatre criticism contained careful analysis of originality of their production. A notice briefly described the scenography and sometimes the composer’s work. The final part contained a laconic conclusion. On the one hand, such a scheme of compiling notices impoverished the critic’s possibilities, his freedom in expressing thoughts, and on the other hand, it set a clear structure for presenting the material. In this period, as it has been at all times, the performance notices remained the most popular genre of theatre criticism. Portraits of actors were printed occasionally. Interviews were rather rare (usually with a producer). Conclusions. Theatre criticism of the second half of the 1930s–1940s existed in strict limits dictated by ideological reasons, because of which it only partially elucidated the stylistic changes that took place in the T. Shevchenko Kharkov Theatre in this period. For an objective analysis of the activities of the theatre, it is necessary to address to a wide range of sources, in particular the recollections of the direct participants of the then theatrical process that were published later, in period of ideological “thaw”.


2020 ◽  
Vol 954 (12) ◽  
pp. 10-19
Author(s):  
Yu.M. Neiman ◽  
L.S. Sugaipova

The authors summarize the principle underlying the modern satellite altimetry. Careful analysis of the shape of the reflected signal enables estimating the flight altitude of the satellite altimeter above sea level, and other important parameters of the sea surface in the area under study quite reliably. Important in doing so is the reflected signal power model used. The Brown-Hayne model seems to be the most common one. The values of these parameters are determined from measurements using certain optimization methods. It is especially noted that the problem in question can be successfully solved by methods based on modern theory of artificial neural networks. Numerical experiments using real altimetric data were carried out in MATLAB environment. In this regard, the basic concepts of this theory are described and the possibilities of its use as an effective approximation of any dependence are emphasized. The Levenberg-Marquardt method and the genetic algorithm of artificial neural networks show the same results, but the latter does not require setting initial values of parameters, only limits of their possible change.


2021 ◽  
Vol 47 (4) ◽  
pp. 273-280
Author(s):  
William Mills Todd

Abstract Jeffrey Brooks’ new book, The Firebird and the Fox, draws on an unsurpassed knowledge of Russian literature and culture of all levels, from the folk and popular to the canonical and avant-garde. It divides the “age of genius” (1855–1953) into three periods: the emancipation of the arts (1850–1889), politics and the arts (1890–1916), the Bolshevik Revolution and the arts (1917–1950), each with its own configurations of popular and high culture and construction of creative artists, media, and readers. But three core themes overarch the periods and the exceptionally broad range of phenomena the book discusses: freedom and order, boundaries, art and reality. Throughout Brooks analyzes crossovers and intersections between cultural institutions, between genres and media, and – especially for the Soviet period – between the lines. His categories are at times sociological, historical, and literary. The book implies a theory of cultural production that gives unusual weight to the agency of creative artists. In conclusion readings of three works Brooks does not analyze (Dostoevsky’s Demons, Bely’s Petersburg, and Eisenstein’s Alexander Nevsky) illustrate the productivity of Brooks’ broad and humane approach to Russian artistic culture.


A re-examination is made of the Landau-Zener formula relating to the probability of an electronic jump near the crossing-point of two potential energy curves (or surfaces). Three cases are distinguished: discrete-discrete, discrete-continuum and continuum-continuum transitions. Different formulae are obtained for each of these cases. These formulae involve certain matrix elements of the interaction between the energy curves. A careful analysis is made of the order of magnitude of the terms that appear, and some corrections are made of previous work. It appears that the limits within which the original Landau-Zener formula is valid are seldom found in actual practice. A new formula (50) of greater validity is presented.


2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Erwin ◽  
Dimitri Alexei Gadotti

Studies have suggested that there is a strong correlation between the masses of nuclear star clusters (NSCs) and their host galaxies, a correlation which is said to be an extension of the well-known correlations between supermassive black holes (SMBHs) and their host galaxies. But careful analysis of disk galaxies—including 2D bulge/disk/bar decompositions—shows that while SMBHs correlate with the stellar mass of thebulgecomponent of galaxies, the masses of NSCs correlate much better with thetotalgalaxy stellar mass. In addition, the mass ratioMNSC/M⋆, totfor NSCs in spirals (at least those with Hubble types Sc and later) is typically an order of magnitude smaller than the mass ratioMBH/M⋆, bulof SMBHs. The absence of a universal “central massive object” correlation argues against common formation and growth mechanisms for both SMBHs and NSCs. We also discuss evidence for a break in the NSC-host galaxy correlation, galaxies with Hubble types earlier than Sbc appear to host systematically more massive NSCs than do types Sc and later.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lourdes Santamaria Blasco ◽  
Amparo Alepuz Rostoll ◽  
Rocio Villalonga Campos

Tres artistas agrupadas bajo el nombre de MISE en PLIS, ponen en escena (mise en scene) una investigación y diseño sobre la producción, reproductibilidad, difusión y comercialización de obra artística, con una perspectiva interdisciplinar y trabajando en la edición del libro/objeto de artista, tanto como soporte de obras gráficas (ilustraciones, fotografías, collages) como contenedor de objetos siguiendo la tradición Dadaísta y Surrealista respecto a los objets trouvés y los ready mades. Las obras resultantes de esta investigación rinden homenaje a las estrategias creativas de estos movimientos de vanguardia, desde el concepto de lo fragmentado y el de la multiplicidad al de la reproductibilidad técnica; desde las técnicas, medios y procesos empleados (collage, fotomontaje, tipografías, etc.) a la revisión de las artistas menos conocidas del Dadá y del Surrealismo. Estas estrategias son la evidencia de esa complejidad que alcanza a las artes plásticas, constituyendo los precedentes de la creación contemporánea, con unos recursos más virtuales y aplicados a los medios infográficos y digitales actuales. Gracias a esto, lo que aquí presentamos, nos ha permitido poner énfasis en la vigencia de las vanguardias como fuente inagotable de recursos gráficos y conceptuales, y nos señala el campo abierto en los márgenes difusos que existen entre unas manifestaciones artísticas y otras.QUI… DADA C’EST MOI. History of an egg, by MISE in PLIS. Book / Object in memory to Emilio Sdun.Three artists grouped under the name of MISE in PLIS, staged (mise en scene) research and design on production, reproducibility, diffusion and commercialization of artistic work with an interdisciplinary perspective and working on the edition of the book / object artist, both as a support of graphic works (illustrations, photographs, co-llages) as container objects following the Dadaist and Surrealist tradition regarding the found objects and readymades. The works resulting from this research pay tribute to the creative strategies of these avant-garde movements, from the concept of the fragmented and the multiplicity of technical reproducibility; from the techniques and proce-sses used media (collage, photomontage, fonts, etc.) to the revision of the lesser-known artists of Dada and Surrealism. These strategies are evidence of that complexity reaches the visual arts, constituting the precedents of contemporary creation, with more virtual and applied to current computer graphics and digital media resources. Thanks to this, what is here has allowed us to emphasize the effect of the vanguards as an inexhaustible source of graphics and conceptual resources, and points the open field in the diffuse margins between some artistic and other events.


2020 ◽  
Vol 19 (3) ◽  
pp. 129-136
Author(s):  
S.N. Mikhaylov ◽  

the article deals with various aspects of mastering the compositions written by avant-garde composers by cellist students. The cello repertoire, created in the XX–XXI centuries, is based on avant-garde writing techniques and non-traditional performing techniques, which are rarely included in the content of the disciplines of professional training programs for cellists, not only in music colleges, but also in universities. The methods of composition used by avant-gardists in works for cello, as well as the artistic concepts embodied by them, are considered in the article from the point of view of the problems of mastering the repertoire by students of higher educational institutions. The most effective methods of practical development of avantgarde works, which use modern writing techniques, are proposed. Among them: a demonstration method, in which the teacher shows the work in his own performance and the ways of performing the most difficult parts in the score; listening to the work performed by the master in audio or video recordings, as well as comparing the interpretations of different performers; careful analysis of the score and the means of artistic expression of the studied work, including independent and joint analysis with the teacher; development of your own interpretation concept with comments on each section of the composition and explanations of the means of expression.


Author(s):  
Faye Hammill

This chapter focuses on The New Yorker in its first year, exploring its mediation of the whole range of the city's print culture. Balancing between fascination and ironic detachment in its attitude to the celebrity gossip and sensation disseminated in the tabloids, and similarly in its attitude to the high culture disseminated in avant garde and smart magazines, The New Yorker adopted an intermediate position which affiliates it with middlebrow culture. The chapter shows how, as multiauthored collages, incorporating a diverse mix of content and evolving over time, magazines are always difficult to position in relation to cultural hierarchies. The New Yorker, for example, has been classed, in different critical accounts, as modernist, as mass market, and as middlebrow.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document