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Style (calendar) &
Philadelphia Style (calendar)
20002001
by Wendy Steiner, Director,
Penn Humanities Forum
Human nature, the Forum's theme
and research focus for 1999-2000, is a topic that has allowed humanists
to react to the discoveries of evolutionary biology and genetic research
and to re-examine the recent emphasis of humanistic inquiry on anti-essentialism,
ideology, and difference. One claim that arose out of this discussion
came from Phillip Chase, a Penn anthropologist, who argues that human
beings and animals may share the use of tools, but that only human beings
expend energy on designing and decorating those tools beyond merely functional
requirements. In other words, a crucial aspect of human nature is style.
The topic of style cuts across every
discipline in the humanities, allowing us to pose a series of questions
with special reference to the University of Pennsylvania and Philadelphia:
- What does "style" mean
when applied in a folk context versus a high-art context? Penn has a
rich tradition of folkloric research, and Philadelphia has many specialists
in folk and outsider art in its museums and galleries. Moreover, the
Penn Humanities Forum is affiliated with Penn's Folklore Center.
- Do communities create style
nowadays, or does style create communities, or both? Have the media
and technology changed this interaction?
- Is the pursuit of happiness
identical to the pursuit of style in the post-Enlightenment period?
Always? Never?
- Is style intrinsically
opposed to function? If so, does it automatically imply freedom, arbitrariness,
caprice? What about constraints on style? In other words, do we necessarily
conceive of style as independence from biological imperatives but conformity
to social imperatives?
- Why did stylistics become
passé in the academic criticism of all the arts-or did it?
- Why is the notion of style
so closely associated with women, when nothing done by either sex is
bereft of style?
- Does the commercial underpinning
of the fashion industry still force us to disqualify fashion as art?
Have style and economics ever been distinct? If so, what has been the
price of this purity?
- What is the relation between
disciplinary style (the inclusion or exclusion of narrative in history;
the tolerance or intolerance for jargon in philosophy or literary criticism
or musicology) and the potential for interdisciplinarity or popularization?
- Is it possible to think
of style apart from periodization in the arts, and if not, how can it
escape the distortions of period concepts?
- How accurate is style as
a heuristic device in the various disciplines? Is the evidence of style
accurate? In real tests, would experts identify objects correctly by
using stylistic criteria? Would they identify the stylistic criteria
themselves? (Is this a meaningful set of questions?)
- What factors make up individual
style in non-artistic symbolic activities: everyday speech, movement,
self-presentation, handwriting, and so forth, and how can we distinguish
the realm of style from rule governedness in these cases?
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ANNUAL TOPICS
Travel, 2006–07
Word and Image,
2005-06
Sleep and Dreams,
2004–05
Belief, 200304
The Book,
200203
Time,
200102
Style,
200001
Human
Nature, 199900
Celebration of
Philadelphia Writers, March 1999
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