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Yuriko Saito

    1 gennaio 1950

    Yuriko Saito è una professoressa di filosofia il cui lavoro si addentra nell'estetica quotidiana e ambientale. La sua ricerca esplora come i valori estetici permeano le nostre esperienze quotidiane e come il nostro ambiente modella la nostra percezione della bellezza. Saito enfatizza la connessione tra il pensiero filosofico e gli aspetti concreti della vita e della cultura. Le sue pubblicazioni attingono spesso all'estetica giapponese, offrendo una lente unica su temi universali.

    Aesthetics of Care
    Aesthetics of the Familiar
    Everyday Aesthetics
    • Everyday Aesthetics

      • 273pagine
      • 10 ore di lettura

      This ground-breaking book brings to life a neglected topic: our everyday aesthetic interactions with the world around us and the objects in it. Yuriko Saito shows how exploring everyday aesthetics can enrich the content of our aesthetic discourse, and reveals its influence on the state of the world and our quality of life.

      Everyday Aesthetics
    • Aesthetics of the Familiar

      • 272pagine
      • 10 ore di lettura

      Yuriko Saito, the leading figure in the field, explores the nature and significance of the aesthetic dimensions of people's everyday lives. She argues that everyday aesthetics can be an effective instrument for directing humanity's collective and cumulative world-making project.

      Aesthetics of the Familiar
    • Aesthetics of Care

      • 256pagine
      • 9 ore di lettura

      Building upon her previous work on everyday aesthetics, Yuriko Saito argues in this book that the aesthetic and ethical concerns are intimately connected in our everyday life. Specifically, she shows how aesthetic experience embodies a care relationship with the world and how the ethical relationship with others, whether humans, non-human creatures, environments, or artifacts, is guided by aesthetic sensibility and manifested through aesthetic means.Weaving together insights gained from philosophy, art, design, and medicine, as well as artistic and cultural practices of Japan, she illuminates the aesthetic dimensions of various forms of care in our management of everyday life. Emphasis is placed on the experience of interacting with others including objects, a departure from the prevailing mode of aesthetic inquiry that is oriented toward judgment-making from a spectator's point of view. Saito shows that when everyday activities, ranging from having a conversation and performing a care act to engaging in self-care and mending an object, are ethically grounded and aesthetically informed and guided, our experiences lead to a good life.

      Aesthetics of Care