_Conversation Pieces_ sketches an object-oriented lineage for
modernism, showing that Virginia Woolf's passion for objects was
fuelled by her participation in a widespread conversation about
philosophical empiricism's affective and aesthetic legacies—one
involving a variety of eighteenth, nineteenth, and twentieth-century
thinkers, such as David Hume, Leslie Stephen, Walter Pater, Vernon
Lee, Henri Bergson, William James, G.E. Moore, and Bertrand Russell.
While empiricism has been largely neglected by literary scholars, its
view of objects powerfully shaped modernist sensibilities and
aesthetics. Woolf's and other early-twentieth-century writers and
philosophers' multifaceted responses to the evolving character of
empiricist philosophy reveal that empiricism continued into the
twentieth century as one of the most ubiquitous and vigorous elements
energizing modern thought. However, modernism was also defined by an
important departure from empiricism. While traditional empiricism had
suggested that experience is profoundly circumscribed because we can
only know our own sense impressions, many sought to radicalize
empiricism by making the preliminary acceptance of mind-independent
objects the necessary foundation for intersubjectivity and the
acknowledgement of otherness.
Woolf describes the scene of shared attention to an object as an
exemplary starting point for engaging with the complexities,
contradictions, and tensions of living in a more-than-human world. As
writers continually turned to the object for its promise of a
conversable world, the conversation piece came to encapsulate modern
aspirations for relationality.
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Virginia Woolf and Object Philosophy
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780198990666
Publisert
2026
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Oxford University Press Academic UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter