慶應義塾大学学術情報リポジトリ(KOARA)KeiO Associated Repository of Academic resources

慶應義塾大学学術情報リポジトリ(KOARA)

Home  »»  Listing item  »»  Detail

Detail

Item Type Article
ID
AN00150430-00000057-0137  
Preview
Image
thumbnail  
Caption  
Full text
AN00150430-00000057-0137.pdf
Type :application/pdf Download
Size :1.6 MB
Last updated :Aug 19, 2010
Downloads : 684

Total downloads since Aug 19, 2010 : 684
 
Release Date
 
Title
Title ハーバート・スペンサーにおける芸術と社会  
Kana ハーバート・スペンサー ニ オケル ゲイジュツ ト シャカイ  
Romanization Habato Supensa ni okeru geijutsu to shakai  
Other Title
Title Art and society sociology of art by Herbert Spencer  
Kana  
Romanization  
Creator
Name 山岸, 健  
Kana ヤマギシ, タケシ  
Romanization Yamagishi, Takeshi  
Affiliation 慶應義塾大学  
Affiliation (Translated)  
Role  
Link  
Edition
 
Place
東京  
Publisher
Name 三田哲學會  
Kana ミタ テツガクカイ  
Romanization Mita tetsugakukai  
Date
Issued (from:yyyy) 1971  
Issued (to:yyyy)  
Created (yyyy-mm-dd)  
Updated (yyyy-mm-dd)  
Captured (yyyy-mm-dd)  
Physical description
 
Source Title
Name 哲學  
Name (Translated)  
Volume  
Issue 57  
Year 1971  
Month 3  
Start page 137  
End page 164  
ISSN
05632099  
ISBN
 
DOI
URI
JaLCDOI
NII Article ID
 
Ichushi ID
 
Other ID
 
Doctoral dissertation
Dissertation Number  
Date of granted  
Degree name  
Degree grantor  
Abstract
In this paper I try to understand the main problems of theories of society and art in works written by Herbert Spencer (1820-1903). He was really a man of Victorian England. The Victorian Age was the 'age of coal and iron' or 'the Railway Age' and it was characterized by constant and rapid change in economic circumstance, social custom, and intellectual atmosphere, so the nineteenth century was an age of transition. We may find in his writings his attitude to his age and changing way of life in England. He once explained the aim of Sociogy (the Social Science) as follows : 'Sociology has to recognize truths of social development, structure, and function, that are some of them universal, some of them general, some of them special'. He thought that all social phenomena are phenomena of life. Also he regarded society as a growth and not a manufacture. He used next terms frequently and these may be called 'key terms' analyzing his theories of society and art. Some examples are as follows : Social organism, evolution, growth, development, structure, function, co-operation, consensus, class, the sustaining system, the distributing system, the regulating system, social metamorphoses, homogeneity, heterogeneity, differentiation, integration etc. For him the the law of progress or evolution is not only clearly exemplified in the evolution of the social organism, but also it is exemplified with equal clearness in the evolution of all products of human thought and action such as language, art, and science. Then he surveyed and traced such law or principle as differentiation and integration in various artistic phenomena, for example in artist, style and structure of works, interrelation between arts. He thought that 'in ancient Egypt, the priest was the primitive sculptor ; and the association of painting with sculpture was so close as to imply that he was also the primitive painter-either immediately or by proxy'. Or in another page we can find next passage. 'Along with differentiation of the lay painter from the clerical painter there began a differentiation of lay painters from one another.' In some articles he argued function of art and role of artist. Also he discussed distributing system of literary works, in another word ' book-distribution.' Here and above I can find main problems and methods of sociology of art, then Herbert Spencer may be called one of founders of so-called sociology of art, sociological or anthropological study of art.
 
Table of contents
1. はじめに
2. スペンサーの英国
3. 社会の理論と芸術の理論
4. むすび
 
Keyword
 
NDC
 
Note

 
Language
日本語  
Type of resource
text  
Genre
Journal Article  
Text version
publisher  
Related DOI
Access conditions

 
Last modified date
Aug 19, 2010 09:00:00  
Creation date
Aug 19, 2010 09:00:00  
Registerd by
mediacenter
 
History
 
Index
/ Public / Faculty of Letters / Philosophy / 57 (197103)
 
Related to