Why overt or even subtle acts of adornment-based rebellion against cisnormativity make things better for everyone. Continue reading

October 8, 2021
by Aesthetics for Birds
2 Comments
October 8, 2021
by Aesthetics for Birds
2 Comments
Why overt or even subtle acts of adornment-based rebellion against cisnormativity make things better for everyone. Continue reading
November 5, 2014
by Aesthetics for Birds
7 Comments
What follows is a guest post by Elisabeth Camp. She teaches at Rutgers University, New Brunswick. Her research focuses on thoughts and utterances that don’t fit standard propositional models, including metaphor and sarcasm, slurs and insinuation. She also works on the varieties of imagination, the theory of concepts, non-human animal cognition, and maps. I’ve been spending a disproportionate amount of time in the past year musing about pink. I have a daughter who just turned 2 and is quite vocal in her opinions. High among these is the general gloriousness of pink and the intrinsic goodness of things that happen to be colored pink: for instance, that strawberry ice cream is maximally delicious, in virtue of its color. Her passion for pink is, most obviously, a form of comeuppance being visited upon me by an irony-loving universe; but it also raises some puzzles at the intersection of aesthetics, semiotics, and … Continue reading