Richard Shusterman

Richard Shusterman.

Richard Shusterman is an American pragmatist philosopher. Known for his contributions to philosophical aesthetics and the emerging field of somaesthetics, currently he is the Dorothy F. Schmidt Eminent Scholar in the Humanities and Professor of Philosophy at Florida Atlantic University.

Biography and Career

Richard Shusterman was born on December 3, 1949, to a Jewish family living in Philadelphia, USA. At the age 16 he left his home and went to Israel, where he continued his education, studying English and philosophy at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. There he received a B.A. degree in English and Philosophy, and later an M.A. degree in philosophy (both degrees awarded magna cum laude). After teaching at different Israeli academic institutions, and receiving tenure at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev with an episode as a visiting fellow at St. John’s College, Oxford University during academic year 1984/85, Shusterman became an Associate Professor of Philosophy at Temple University, Philadelphia, USA in 1986. He was granted tenure in 1988 and promoted to full professor in 1991. He then served as chair of the philosophy department between the years of 1998–2004. In 2004 Richard Shusterman left Temple University to become the Dorothy F. Schmidt Eminent Scholar in the Humanities at Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, where he also holds the rank of Professor in the departments of Philosophy and English. Richard Shusterman has been married twice. From his first marriage in Israel, he has two sons and a daughter. He has one daughter from his second marriage.

During his years at the University of Jerusalem, Shusterman focused on analytic philosophy. The interest carried over with his doctoral dissertation at Oxford University; The Object of Literary Criticism which he wrote at St. John’s College under the supervision of J. O. Urmson and defended in 1979. It was published under the original title in 1984. 1988 saw the publication of Shusterman’s second book, T. S. Eliot and the Philosophy of Criticism, and with it came a turn in his philosophical focus as well. Influenced by the work that produced the book and personal experiences, Shusterman’s attention moved from analytic philosophy to pragmatism. He also began work to develop his own theory of pragmatist aesthetics; based on John Dewey’s aesthetics but augmented by the argumentative methods and tools of analytic philosophy. His third book published, Pragmatist Aesthetics in 1992, brought a big breakthrough in Shusterman’s academic career. The book’s original approach to the problems of definition of art, organic wholes, interpretation, popular art, and the ethics of taste brought him international fame as the book was translated into 14 languages and several editions were published. Shusterman’s position was further strengthened by three subsequent publications: Practicing Philosophy in 1997, Performing Live in 2000, and Surface and Depth in 2002; in which he continued the pragmatist tradition, raising significant interest, provoking numerous critiques and stimulating debates not only among professional philosophers, but in the areas of literary and cultural studies as well. In Practicing Philosophy, Shusterman introduces his concept of ‘somaesthetics’, which he elaborates in greater detail in Performing Live. Somaesthetics is the focus of Shusterman’s two subsequent books, Body Consciousness: A Philosophy of Mindfulness and Somaesthetics (2008) and Thinking through the Body: Essays in Somaesthetics (2012). The first of these books, translated into seven languages, helped establish somaesthetics as an international, interdisciplinary project involving scholars from fields beyond philosophy, while the second book consolidated this movement toward the interdisciplinary approach by applying somaesthetics to various arts, and cultural practices.

In 2007, as a part of his project of developing somaesthetics, Shusterman established the Center for Body, Mind, and Culture at FAU. He is a member of many editorial boards and has been allocated important grants and fellowships for his research; from the National Endowment of the Humanities, the Fulbright Commission, and the Humboldt Foundation.

One of the important factors influencing Shusterman's philosophy has been his international career. For instance, his work in France with Pierre Bourdieu, the Sorbonne, and the College International de Philosophie has allowed his pragmatism to engage and deploy the contemporary French philosophical tradition. His Fulbright Professorship in Berlin enabled his pragmatism to intersect more closely with contemporary German philosophy. Similarly, his years as a visiting research professor in Hiroshima, Japan and in Beijing and Shandong in China facilitated his study of Asian philosophy and Zen practice.

Shusterman philosophy stretches beyond the confines of professional academic life. In 1995, he was a delegate member of the UNESCO project Philosophy and Democracy in the World, and for several years he directed the UNESCO project MUSIC: Music, Urbanism, Social Integration and Culture. In 2012 he prepared a project commissioned by UNESCO that aims to use the internet to stimulate international youth to immerse in dialogue about peace and violence, through the medium of art. Recalling the classical Greek concept of education, the project is named PAIDEIA, an acronym that stands for Peace through Art and Internet Dialog for Education and Intercultural Association. On a more local level, during the years 1998-2004, he organized and hosted a public discussion forum, titled “Dialogues on the Square”, at Philadelphia’s main Barnes & Noble bookstore, at Rittenhouse Square. In 2002, he received his professional certification as a Feldenkrais practitioner, and he has worked since as a somatic educator and therapist.

Key ideas

Shusterman's place in the contemporary Pragmatism

Contemporary pragmatism can be divided into two sub-fields; the neo-classical and the neo-analytical.[1] The latter has been well described by Richard Rorty, as an amalgam of the elements of classical pragmatism and analytic philosophy, which is sometimes supplemented, especially in Rorty’s case, by the ideas of continental thinkers like Martin Heidegger.[2] The former, represented, among others, by Susan Haack, is more conservative in its development of the classical tradition and adopts a critical stance toward Rorty’s interpretation thereof.[3]

Assuming this description is correct, Shusterman’s pragmatism lies somewhere in the middle between the above-mentioned positions. Although his analytic background and acceptance of some of Rorty’s ideas (he even subsumes his and Rorty’s thought under a common category of “reconstructivist genealogical-poetic pragmatism”[4]) seemingly make him a neo-analytic pragmatist, the stress he puts on the importance of the notion of experience, which Rorty would like to substitute with the notion of language, chimes perfectly with the neo-classical stance.

Besides classical pragmatism and analytic philosophy, Shusterman’s interests touch varied traditions and disciplines: continental sociology (Pierre Bourdieu[5]) and philosophy (Michel Foucault, Michel de Montaigne, Friedrich Nietzsche[6]), Western body therapy (Moshe Feldenkrais, F. Matthias Alexander[7]) as well as East-Asian thought (Confucius).[8]

This diversity of interests and inspirations finds its reflection in the scope of Shusterman’s philosophical work which embraces not only aesthetics, but also metaphysics, ethics, philosophy of language, political theory as well as metaphilosophy; in which he advocates the idea of philosophy as the art of living.

Experience

Experience serves as a basic category in Shusterman’s pragmatism, both in terms of methodology (the pragmatist should always work from experience [9]) as well as ontology or epistemology (experience “is a transactional nexus of interacting energies connecting the embodied self and its environing world”[10]) but contrary to John Dewey, Shusterman does not engage in constructing a general metaphysical conception. He has, however, made significant comments on Dewey’s insights [11] and defends Dewey's idea of immediate, nondiscursive experience against the criticism put forward by Richard Rorty.[12]

While Rorty shares Dewey’s commitment to debunk epistemological foundationalism, he (Rorty) believes that the notion of language is better suited to achieve this goal, than the notion of immediate, non-discursive experience preferred by Dewey. Rorty further says that Dewey’s theory itself collapses into a version of foundationalism, where immediate, non-discursive experience serves as evidence for particular knowledge claims.

To this, Shusterman replies that: (a) The anti-foundationalist thrust of the notion of language is not as clear as Rorty sees it (in fact language has been frequently used as a foundationalist category) (b) Dewey never really intended his theory of experience to be a kind of epistemological foundationalism, but rather wanted to celebrate the richness and value of immediate experience, including “the immediate dimension of somatic experience” and to emphasize the positive role such experience can play in improving the quality of human life. (The inspiration of body theorist-therapist F. M. Alexander is important here). Although he argues that Dewey’s theory was ultimately spoiled by a kind of foundationalism (not the one Rorty accuses Dewey of but rather one asserting that the specific quality of immediate experience is the glue that makes coherent thought possible), Shusterman believes that the philosophical value of experience can and should be reaffirmed in an anti-foundationalist form.

In Shusterman’s and, also, Dewey's opinion, the eastern meditation practices repair perception for understanding our dependence on the society’s moral order. Shusterman underlines that even if, as Rorty claims, Wilfrid Sellars’s critique of the myth of the given proves that immediate, non-discursive somatic experience cannot be integrated into epistemology, it does not preclude that this experience may be usefully deployed in philosophy as such, because to think otherwise would be to wrongly conflate all philosophy with one of its sub-disciplines, i.e. theory of cognition. And the fact that we can hardly imagine any form of application of the immediate somatic experience in the realm of philosophy is not a proof that this is impossible, but rather indicates that our conception of philosophy is dominated by an idealistic paradigm, naturally hostile to the body as such. The will to change this situation has been one of the reasons why Shusterman developed a philosophical sub-discipline devoted to the body and its experience: Somaesthetics.

Definitions of art

Shusterman also addresses the philosophical problems of defining art; by presenting both, meta-theoretical insights as well as definitions of his own.

On the meta-theoretical level he criticizes essentialist, classificatory definitions of art (preferred by the traditional analytic philosophy), which he calls “wrapper definitions” since they aim “at the perfect coverage” of the logical extension of the notion of art.[13] Shusterman finds these definitions problematic, given art’s contested value and nature as well as its unpredictable development in the future. He further argues that there is a goal for art definitions, which is more important than the conceptual coverage that is directional/transformational in “illuminating the special point and value of art or [...] improving art’s appreciation”.[14]

He says that these ideas may converge, but since they may as well not, it is unacceptable to exclude any definitions only on the basis that they do not satisfy the standards of taxonomical validity, like e.g. evaluative definitions which nevertheless can be useful in their own way. Besides discussing the issue of wrapper definitions in general, Shusterman has also criticized particular definitions of that kind invented by George Dickie and Arthur Danto.[15]

Shusterman advocates a definition of art; as experience that is influenced by Dewey’s definition with significant changes. While he accepts the majority of the elements central to the Dewey’s conception of this experience (e.g., that it cannot be reduced to the private mental world of the subject being rather an interaction between the subject and the object), there are some he finds questionable (e.g. Dewey’s insistence on the unity and coherence of aesthetic experience which Shusterman would like to supplement with aesthetics of rupture and fragmentation). He says that Dewey was wrong to treat his definition of art as experience as a traditionalist wrapper definition, thus making it vulnerable to the valid charges, that it is both too narrow and too wide (there are some artworks which do not engender aesthetic experiences and, conversely, in some cases aesthetic experience accompanies phenomena which simply cannot be redefined as art, like natural beauty, e.g.). He further says that what Dewey should have done instead was to assign to it the directional and transformational role mentioned above. Conceived this way, Shusterman argues, the definition of art as experience has an undeniable value because even though it cannot embrace the whole extension of the concept of art it “underlines a crucial background condition, direction, and valued goal of art” (i.e. aesthetic experience) and also helps to widen “the realm of art by challenging the rigid division between art and action that is supported by definitions that define art as mimesis, poiesis, or the narrow practice defined by the institutional art world".[16]

Shusterman also advocates a definition of art as dramatization, which supplements the definition he has inherited from Dewey not only by illuminating art’s nature from a slightly different angle, but also by serving a different, yet equally important purpose – the reconciliation of two prominent and, at the same time, conflicted aesthetic accounts of art: historicism and naturalism. Since the notion of dramatization involves, and harmonizes two important moments: of putting something into a formalized frame (e.g. “the frame of a theatrical performance”[17]) and of intense experiential content that is framed, it presents itself as a potential synthesizing formula for historicism and naturalism which, Shusterman argues, can be reduced to emphasizing the formal institutional frame of art (historicism) or experiential intensity that characterizes art as such (naturalism).

Both of Shusterman’s definitions have become the subject of many commentaries and criticisms.[18]

Interpretation

Of the many debates that galvanize contemporary humanities, one of the most important one is devoted to the problem of interpretation. Shusterman has participated in it by co-editing a fundamental anthology “The Interpretive Turn”, as well as making his opinions known. Shusterman’s account of interpretation is constructed in opposition to both analytic aesthetics and deconstruction, which are often said to constitute the two opposite poles of contemporary interpretive theory. As he claims, both of them share “a picture of understanding as the recapturing or reproducing of a particular [...] [“separate and autonomous”] meaning-object”, yet they differ as to whether such act is possible. Deconstructionists, assuming their protean vision of language as “systematic play of differences”, claim it is not, and hence deem every reading a “misreading”, while analytic aestheticians think otherwise, usually construing the objective work-meaning as “metaphysically fixed in the artwork” and identifying it with the intention of the artist or “semantic features of the work itself”.[19]

To avoid both these extremes Shusterman proposes a conception of textual meaning inspired by Wittgenstein(and his notion of language games) in which meaning is thought of as a correlate of understanding, the latter term being conceived as “an ability to handle or respond to [something] in certain accepted ways”[20] which, although shared and legitimized by the community, can be quite different and constitute many diverse “interpretation games”. Interpretation, thus, is not an act (be it successful or inherently condemned to failure) of discovering the meaning of text, but rather of constructing it, or, as Shusterman would like to put it, of “making sense’” of text. One of the corollaries of this account is that correctness of interpretation is always relative to the “rules” (typically implicit) of a given interpretation game. Since there are many different incommensurable games existing at the same time and since some of them have undergone some significant changes over history (and some may even have disappeared from use), we can speak of a plurality of correct interpretations of the same text both in synchronic and diachronic dimensions. Another consequence of this theory is Shusterman’s logical pluralism which claims not only that there can be different (even contradictory), yet equally true interpretations (that would be only a cognitive pluralism), but also that there are legitimate forms of approaching texts which do not even aim at interpretational truth or plausibility, but rather aim at other useful goals (e.g., providing pleasure or making an old text more relevant to contemporary readers).[21]

Another of Shusterman’s contributions to the theory of interpretation is his critique of a widely held view he calls ‘hermeneutic universalism’, and attributes to Hans-Georg Gadamer, Alexander Nehamas and Stanley Fish, among others. Agreeing with basic anti-foundationalist thrust of the hermeneutic universalists’ position, Shusterman simultaneously rejects their thesis that “to perceive, read, understand, or behave at all intelligently [...] must always be to interpret” and seeks to refute it with many original arguments. He also insists that the notion of interpretation needs a contrasting category to guarantee its own meaningfulness. If everything is interpretation then the concept loses its point. Shusterman argues that immediate, non-interpretive understanding can serve that role of contrast. Inspired by Wittgenstein and Heidegger’s theory of hermeneutic circle, Shusterman proposes:

“the immediacy of uninterrupted understandings of language (as when I immediately understand simple and pertinent utterances of a language I know well) and the mediacy of interpretations (as when I encounter an utterance or text that I do not understand in terms of word-meaning or contextual relevance and then have to figure out what is meant)”.[22]

Among Shusterman’s achievements in the theory of interpretation, there are also the accounts of literary criticism he created in his earlier, analytic period, as well as his pragmatist arguments against interpretational intentionalism and his genealogical critique of deconstructionist (Harold Bloom’s, Jonathan Culler’s), analytic (Joseph Margolis’) and neo-pragmatist (Richard Rorty’s, Stanley Fish’s, Walter Benn Michaels and Steven Knapp’s) literary theories which, as he claims, are all governed at their core by an ideology of professionalism.

Popular art

According to Shusterman, one of the most pressing sociocultural problems of today is the aesthetic legitimization of popular art. He feels that though popular art may now seem to be socially justified, its artistic value is still questioned which leads to the following problems:

A sincere advocate of popular aesthetics, Shusterman is careful to distinguish his stance from one-sided apologia and would rather characterize it as ‘melorism’ which “recognizes popular art’s flaws and abuses but also its merits [while also holding] that popular art should be improved because it can and often does achieve real aesthetic merits and serve worthy social ends”.[25] Putting his meliorism into practice, Shusterman seeks to win aesthetic legitimation for popular art in two ways:

Somaesthetics

Somaesthetics’ is a term coined by Shusterman to denote a new philosophical discipline he has invented as a remedy for the following problems:

The above-mentioned conditions have determined the nature of somaesthetics as a grounded in philosophical aesthetics yet interdisciplinary project of theory and practice which can be defined as:

“the critical, meliorative study of the experience and the use of one’s body as a locus sensory-aesthetic appreciation (aisthesis) and creative self-fashioning [...], devoted [also] to the knowledge, discourses and disciplines that structure such somatic care or can improve it.”.[35]

To clarify the terminological issues one needs to mention that Shusterman has intentionally put the term ‘soma’ (instead of the more familiar ‘body’) in the name of his disciplinary proposal to emphasize one important feature of his conception of corporeality. For Shusterman, who is a true disciple of Dewey in this regard, bodily and mental (as well as cultural and biological) dimensions of human being are essentially inseparable and to signify this unity (this “sentient perceiving «body-mind»”) he prefers to use the term ‘soma’ which, unlike ‘body’, does not automatically connote passive flesh contrasted to dynamic soul or mind.

Although Shusterman’s project may at the first glance seem utterly innovatory and even iconoclastic, its various elements, as Shusterman himself admits, can be traced to many respected traditions: ancient Greek philosophy and the later Western philosophies (Michel de Montaigne, John Dewey, Michel Foucault), but also East-Asian wisdom such as Confucianism. Somaesthetics divides into three fundamental branches:

Shusterman himself works in all three somaesthetic subdisciplines:

While undeniably a new phenomenon, somaesthetics, which by now forms the center of Shusterman’s philosophical inquiries, has already influenced many scholars working in fields as diverse as philosophy, art education, dance theory, health and fitness studies.[44]

Selected Books by Richard Shusterman

Secondary literature

About Richard Shusterman

Scholarly Articles

See also

Notes

  1. See, e.g., T. Rockmore, “On Classical and Neo-Analytic Forms of Pragmatism”, Metaphilosophy vol. 36, no. 3, April, 2005.
  2. See, e.g., R. Rorty, “Truth without Correspondence to Reality”, in Philosophy and Social Hope (London: Penguin 1999), p. 24-27.
  3. Cf. S. Haack, “Pragmatism, Old and New”, Contemporary Pragmatism, vol. 1, no. 1, June, 2004.
  4. R. Shusterman, “Pragmatism and Culture: Margolis and Rorty”, in Surface and Depth. Dialectics of Criticism and Culture, (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2002).
  5. See, e.g., R. Shusterman, “Cultural Analysis and the Limits of Philosophy: The Case of Bourdieu” in Surface and Depth.
  6. R. Shusterman, “Somaesthetics and Care of the Self: The Case of Foucault”, Monist, 83, 2000; R. Shusterman “Entertainment: A Question for Aesthetics”, British Journal of Aesthetics, 43, 2003.
  7. R. Shusterman, “The Somatic Turn” in Performing Live (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2000).
  8. R. Shusterman, “Pragmatism and East-Asian Thought”, Metaphilosophy, 35, 2004; R. Shusterman, “Pragmatist Aesthetics and East-Asian Philosophy”, Naked Punch (online edition), May, 2006; http://www.nakedpunch.com/shustermanchina.htm.
  9. See R. Shusterman, Performing Live, p. 96.
  10. R. Shusterman, “Intellectualism and the Field of Aesthetics”, Revue Internationale de Philosophie, 220, 2002).
  11. R. Shusterman, “Pragmatism Between Aesthetic Experience and Aesthetic Education”, Studies in Philosophy and Education, 22, 2003.
  12. See R. Shusterman, "Somatic Experience. Foundation or Reconstruction?", in Practicing Philosophy: Pragmatism and the Philosophical Life (New York: Routledge,1997).
  13. See R. Shusterman, Surface and Depth, p. 179-181
  14. R. Shusterman, “Pragmatism Between Aesthetic Experience and Aesthetic Education”, p. 405.
  15. See R. Shusterman, Pragmatist Aesthetics (2000), p. 38-44. Cf. R. Shusterman, “Art in a Box: Danto” (chapter 10 of Surface and Depth).
  16. R. Shusterman, “Pragmatism and Criticism: A Response to three critics of Pragmatist Aesthetics”, Journal of Speculative Philosophy, 16, 2002, p. 29.
  17. R.Shusterman, “Art as Dramatization,” in Surface and Depth.
  18. E.g., Thomas Leddy and Paul C. Taylor defend Dewey’s original theory of art as experience against Shusterman’s criticism, while Ranjan Ghosh points out that the definition of art as dramatization is significantly consonant with the Indian concept of Rasa (see the secondary literature listed above). Cf J. J. Stuhr, "Practice, Semiotics, and the Limits of Philosophy", Journal of Speculative Philosophy, vol. 19, no. 1, 2005, p. 79-80.
  19. R. Shusterman, Surface and Depth, p. 67.
  20. R. Shusterman, Pragmatist Aesthetics (2000), p. 90.
  21. See R. Shusterman, “Logics of Interpretation: The Persistence of Pluralism”, in Surface and Depth, p. 49.
  22. R. Shusterman, "Pragmatism and Criticism", p. 32.
  23. R. Shusterman, Pragmatist Aesthetics (2000), p. 168.
  24. R.Shusterman, “Popular Art and Education”, Studies in Philosophy and Education, 13, 1995, p. 203.
  25. R.Shusterman, “Popular Art and Education”, p.204.
  26. R. Shusterman, Pragmatist Aesthetics (2000), p. 58.
  27. See chapter 7 of Pragmatist Aesthetics (2000).
  28. R. Shusterman, "Entertainment: A Question for Aesthetics", British Journal of Aesthetics, 43, 2003.
  29. R. Shusterman, “Affect and Authenticity In Country Musicals” in Performing Live (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2000); “The Fine Art of Rap” in Pragmatist Aesthetics (2000); “Art in Action, Art Infraction. Goodman, Rap, Pragmatism (New Reality Mix)” in Practicing Philosophy: Pragmatism and the Philosophical Life; "Pragmatism, Art, and Violence: The Case of Rap”, in T. Yamamoto (ed.), Philosophical Designs for a Socio-Cultural Transformation (Tokyo and Boulder: E.H.E.S.C. and Rowman & Littlefield, 1998).
  30. His „Fine Art of Rap” was first published in 1991: New Literary History, 22, 1991, p. 613-632.
  31. See T. Brennan, “Off the Gangsta Tip: A Rap Appreciation, or Forgetting about Los Angeles”, Critical Inquiry, 20, 1994; G. C. Maher, “Brechtian Hip-Hop. Didactics and Self-Production in Post-Gangsta Political Mixtapes”, Journal of Black Studies, vol. 36, no. 1, September, 2005
  32. R. Shusterman, “Somaesthetics and the Revival of Aesthetics”, Filozofski Vestnik, vol. XXVIII, no. 2, 2007.
  33. R. Shusterman, “Somaesthetics and the Body/Media Issue” in Performing Live, p. 141.
  34. R. Shusterman, “Somaesthetics and the Revival of Aesthetics”
  35. R.Shusterman, “Somaesthetics and Care of the Self: The Case of Foucault”, Monist, 83, 2000, p. 532-533.
  36. R. Shusterman, “Somaesthetics and The Second Sex: A Pragmatist Reading of a Feminist Classic”, Hypatia 18, 2003, p. 112.
  37. Ibidem, p. 112.
  38. Ibidem, p. 114.
  39. R. Shusterman, “Somaesthetics and the Body/Media Issue”
  40. R. Shusterman, “The Somatic Turn: Care of the Body in Contemporary Culture”, chapter 8 of Performing Live.
  41. See e.g., R. Shusterman, “Somaesthetics and Burke’s Sublime”, British Journal of Aesthetics, 45, 2005;“William James, Somatic Introspection, and Care of the Self”, Philosophical Forum, 36, 2005; "The Silent, Limping Body of Philosophy”, in T. Carman and M. Hansen (eds.), The Cambridge Companion to Merleau-Ponty (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005).
  42. “Asian Ars Erotica and the Question of Sexual Aesthetics”,Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism, vol. 65, no. 1, 2007.
  43. R.Shusterman,“Somaesthetics and Education: Exploring the Terrain”, in Liora Bressler (ed.), Knowing Bodies, Moving Minds: Towards Embodied Teaching and Learning (Dordrecht: Kluwer, 2004); “Thinking Through the Body: Educating for the Humanities”, Journal of Aesthetic Education, vol. 40, no. 1, 2006.
  44. Cf. the secondary literature listed above

External links