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Notes on Contributors
Authors:Carolyn Burdett
Institution:1. Birkbeck, University of London c.burdett@bbk.ac.uk
Abstract:By the end of the century, and under pressure from new scientific theories of minds and emotions, the languages in which the Victorians understood the relationship between inner feeling and moral action came under great pressure. At the same time, the established association between aesthetic and moral value was being challenged by aestheticism's espousal of ‘art for art's sake’. This essay examines one very distinctive response to these issues: Vernon Lee's development of the concept of ‘empathy’. Lee offers empathy as a scientifically verifiable process which explains why beauty matters to us. She also seeks to use it to mediate a new position capable of acknowledging the power of aestheticism's critique of Victorian moralism, while re-establishing moral action as central to aesthetic experience.
Keywords:empathy  sympathy  Vernon Lee  psychology  physiology  emotions  aesthetics  aestheticism  morality
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