How Blue Is Read: Language and Sensation in Literature and Philosophy
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Published:2023-10
Issue:2
Volume:47
Page:294-309
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ISSN:1086-329X
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Container-title:Philosophy and Literature
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language:en
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Short-container-title:phl
Abstract
Abstract: Philosophers and art critics have long argued that the language of color misses or even mars the ineffable sensation of color. But a literary perspective shows otherwise. Starting with examples of colors read but not seen, and then discussing how philosophers have addressed (and often muddled) the so-called problem of color, I propose thinking of color terms as techniques for stabilizing and directing color sensations. I then show how William H. Gass and Maggie Nelson develop a version of this idea in their respective books about blue, which are really books about the relationship between writing and quality.
Subject
Literature and Literary Theory,Philosophy