Front cover image for Cultural appropriation and the arts

Cultural appropriation and the arts

"Cultural appropriation is a pervasive feature of the contemporary world. The Parthenon Marbles remain in London. Works of art from indigenous cultures are held by many metropolitan museums. White musicians from Bix Beiderbecke to Eric Clapton have appropriated musical styles from African-American culture. From North America to Australasia, artists have appropriated motifs and stories from aboriginal cultures. Novelists and filmmakers from one culture have taken as their subject matter the lives and practices of members of other cultures." "The practice of cultural appropriation has given rise to important ethical and aesthetic questions. Can cultural appropriation result in the production of aesthetically successful works of art? Is cultural appropriation in the arts morally objectionable? These questions have been widely debated by anthropologists, lawyers, art historians, advocates of the rights of indigenous peoples, literary critics, museum curators, and others. At root, however, these questions are philosophical. Now, for the first time, a philosopher undertakes a systematic investigation of the moral and aesthetic issues to which cultural appropriation gives rise."--Jacket
Print Book, English, 2008
Blackwell Pub., Malden, MA, 2008
xiv, 168 pages ; 24 cm.
9781405176569, 9780470694190, 1405176563, 047069419X
145396488
1. What is cultural appropriation? Art, Culture and Appropriation ; Types of Cultural Appropriation ; What is a Culture? ; Objections to Cultural Appropriation ; In Praise of Cultural Appropriation
2. The aesthetics of cultural appropriation. An Aesthetic Handicap? ; The Cultural Experience Argument ; Aesthetic Properties and Cultural Context ; Authenticity and Appropriation ; Authentic Appropriation ; Cultural Experience and Subject Appropriation ; Appropriation and the Authentic Expression of a Culture
3. Cultural appropriation as theft. Harm by Theft ; Possible Owners of Artworks ; Cultures and Inheritance ; Lost and Abandoned Property ; Cultural Property and Traditional Law ; Collective Knowledge and Collective Property ; Ownership of Land and Ownership of Art ; Property and Value to a Culture ; Cultures and Intellectual Property ; Some Conclusions about Ownership and Appropriation ; The Rescue Argument
4. Cultural appropriation as assault. Other Forms of Harm ; Cultural Appropriation and Harmful Misrepresentation ; Harm and Accurate Representation ; Cultural Appropriation and Economic Opportunity ; Cultural Appropriation and Assimilation ; Art, Insignia and Cultural Identity ; Cultural Appropriation and Privacy
5. Profound offence and cultural appropriation. Harm, Offence and Profound Offence ; Examples of Offensive Cultural Appropriation ; The Problem and the Key to its Solution ; Social Value and Offensive Art ; Freedom of Expression ; The Sacred and the Offensive ; Time and Place Restrictions ; Toleration of Offensive Art ; Reasonable and Unreasonable Offence
Conclusion: responding to cultural appropriation. Summing Up ; Supporting Minority Artists ; Envoy