To the cultural turn and back again: the relevance of aesthetics to the possibility of sustainable futures

Journal paper by Anastasia Loukianov
Geoforum, Vol 138 | Jan 2023

© istock.com / Joe Duquette

Summary

The sociology of consumption has had a fraught relationship with aesthetics, with varying levels of interest in the concept throughout the history of the discipline. Today, aesthetics is barely mentioned at all and is not considered to be relevant to enabling transitions towards more sustainable futures. In this article, Anastasia Loukianov demonstrates how this is due both to the prevalent understanding of aesthetics in sociology—anchored in Kantian discourse on art—and the unwitting consequences of the disciplinary developments which have taken place following the cultural turn.

Drawing from philosophy and anthropology, she presents two different understandings of aesthetics, inspired by Aristotle and Dewey, which provide more fruitful avenues for engaging with the concept.

The paper identifies existing work taking these definitions forward and shows how reconceptualising aesthetics enables us both to grasp the specificities of the unsustainable patterns of consumption of the wealthy and unequal societies of Europe, North America and Australasia, and envision the possibility of a societal transformation beyond the consumer aesthetics of ‘the Capitalocene’.

Decoupling aesthetics from art, Anastasia argues for the importance of defamiliarisation and aesthetic revisioning in the creation of fairer, more sustainable and better futures.

The peer-reviewed, pre-copy-edited version of the paper is available in open access format via the Researchgate. If you have difficulties accessing the paper, please get in touch: info@cusp.ac.uk.

Citation

Loukianov A 2023. To the cultural turn and back again: the relevance of aesthetics to the possibility of sustainable futures. In: Consumption and Society, March 2023. https://doi.org/10.1332/NHOW1883.

Further Reading