Nebraska Reading List
The following is a starter list of readings that might useful to the University of Nebraska MFA students. It is by no means complete. In addition, for those so inclined, I would suggest some introductory readings on Schopenhauer and Kierkegaard, because they have had a significant impact on art and literature, also John Dewey's "Art as Experience," which I suggested in an earlier reading list. For those of you with a sense of humor, I recommend reading Semiotics. Also, take a look at some of the other reading list I have posted.
Nietzsche contra Wagner by Friedrich Nietzsche
Art as the Communication of Feeling: from What is Art? by Leo Tolstoy
The Definition of Beauty (from The Sense of Beauty) by George Santayana
The Dehumanization of Art by Jose Ortega y Gasset
The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction by Walter Benjamin
Truth and the Stereotype by Ernst Hans Gombrich
The Origin of the Work of Art by Martin Heidegger
Abstract, Representational, and so forth by Clement Greenberg
Romantic Survival and Revival in the Twentieth Century by Robert Rosemblum
On the Vernacular of Beauty by Dave Hickey
Boring Art by Frances Colpitt
The Allegorical Impulse: Toward a Theory of Postmodernism by Craig Owens
Modernity: an incomplete project by Jürgen Habermas
A Lecture by George Steiner
Nietzsche contra Wagner by Friedrich Nietzsche
Art as the Communication of Feeling: from What is Art? by Leo Tolstoy
The Definition of Beauty (from The Sense of Beauty) by George Santayana
The Dehumanization of Art by Jose Ortega y Gasset
The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction by Walter Benjamin
Truth and the Stereotype by Ernst Hans Gombrich
The Origin of the Work of Art by Martin Heidegger
Abstract, Representational, and so forth by Clement Greenberg
Romantic Survival and Revival in the Twentieth Century by Robert Rosemblum
On the Vernacular of Beauty by Dave Hickey
Boring Art by Frances Colpitt
The Allegorical Impulse: Toward a Theory of Postmodernism by Craig Owens
Modernity: an incomplete project by Jürgen Habermas
A Lecture by George Steiner
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