1956
DOI: 10.2307/427497
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On the Supposed Incompatibility of Expressionism and Formalism

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“…From a research perspective, the 'aesthetic emotion' concept shifts the focus of aesthetic experience away from the perception of the object (which we refer to as residing in the 'external locus') and into the highly personal, subjective realm of experience (residing in the 'internal locus'). This situation is more complex than the present discussion allows, but some scholars have even suggested an equivalence between beauty, pleasure, and aesthetic emotion (see Armstrong & Detweiler-Bedell, 2008; Langer, 1957, p. 259;Martin, 1956, esp. fn 13) which in our reading has been left unresolved.…”
Section: Aesthetic Emotionsmentioning
confidence: 74%
“…From a research perspective, the 'aesthetic emotion' concept shifts the focus of aesthetic experience away from the perception of the object (which we refer to as residing in the 'external locus') and into the highly personal, subjective realm of experience (residing in the 'internal locus'). This situation is more complex than the present discussion allows, but some scholars have even suggested an equivalence between beauty, pleasure, and aesthetic emotion (see Armstrong & Detweiler-Bedell, 2008; Langer, 1957, p. 259;Martin, 1956, esp. fn 13) which in our reading has been left unresolved.…”
Section: Aesthetic Emotionsmentioning
confidence: 74%