Cover image for A philosophy of luxury
A philosophy of luxury
Title:
A philosophy of luxury
Author:
Wiesing, Lambert.

Roth, Nancy Ann.
ISBN:
9780367138417
Uniform Title:
Luxus. English
Publication Information:
London : Routledge, an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, 2019.
Physical Description:
vii, 171 p. ; 20 cm
Contents:
First play, then war, fear and drugs and now: luxury -- Anthropology and the idea of self-experience -- Aesthetics and the search for moments of self-experience -- Luxury: the Dadaism of possession -- The judgment of luxury -- Luxury: a special aesthetic experience -- Why luxury?
Abstract:
In this thought-provoking book Lambert Wiesing asks simply: What is luxury? Drawing on a fascinating range of examples, he argues that luxury is an aesthetic experience. Unlike experience gained via the senses, such as seeing, hearing or tasting, he argues that luxury is achieved by possessing something - an aspect of philosophy that has been largely neglected. As such, luxury becomes a gesture of individual defiance and a refusal to conform to social expectations of restraint. An increasingly rational and goal-oriented ethos in society makes the appeal of luxury grow even stronger. Drawing on the ideas of philosophers such as Immanuel Kant, Friedrich Schiller, Martin Heidegger and the novelist Ernst Junger, as well as sociologists such as Thorstein Veblen and Theodor Adorno, A Philosophy of Luxury will be of great interest to those in philosophy, art, cultural studies and literature as well as sociology.
Subject Term:

Subject:
Luxury.
Aesthetics.
Summary:
In this thought-provoking book Lambert Wiesing asks simply: What is luxury? Drawing on a fascinating range of examples, he argues that luxury is an aesthetic experience. Unlike experience gained via the senses, such as seeing, hearing or tasting, he argues that luxury is achieved by possessing something - an aspect of philosophy that has been largely neglected. As such, luxury becomes a gesture of individual defiance and a refusal to conform to social expectations of restraint. An increasingly rational and goal-oriented ethos in society makes the appeal of luxury grow even stronger. Drawing on the ideas of philosophers such as Immanuel Kant, Friedrich Schiller, Martin Heidegger and the novelist Ernst Junger, as well as sociologists such as Thorstein Veblen and Theodor Adorno, A Philosophy of Luxury will be of great interest to those in philosophy, art, cultural studies and literature as well as sociology.