My new paper, Monuments as Commitments: How Art Speaks to Groups and How Groups Think in Art, is forthcoming in Pacific Philosophical Quarterly.
The paper argues:
1. That there are some kinds of art that primarily *address groups*, rather than individuals.
2. That monuments are an example of such. And that they are often made by groups to address *themselves* – to commit themselves to a value. Monuments aren’t just memories, they are collective value commitments.
3. This has consequences for the “tear down the monuments” debate. Because if a monument isn’t just a historical memory, but the live commitment by a community to a value, to guide itself by…
4. That art makes it possible for groups and communities to commit themselves to subtle, emotional values.
5. That art is often a better vessel for collective value than shitty mission statements, explicit “learning outcomes”, and crappy corporate value statements.
6. That, in this way, art makes deeply emotional group agency possible.
Published on May 28, 2019 10:03