Google
×
Jay Patrick Starliper / Books
Aesthetic Origins: Peter Viereck and the Imaginative Sources of Politics
Free 7–14 day delivery
Challenging this, Jay Patrick Starliper examines the imagination through the lens of the work of Peter Viereck and other likeminded thinkers. The result is a ...
Challenging this, Jay Patrick Starliper examines the imagination through the lens of the work of Peter Viereck and other likeminded thinkers. The result is a ...
3.8K · 30-day returns
Check each product page for other buying options. Aesthetic Origins: Peter Viereck and the Imaginative Sources of Politics. by Jay Patrick Starliper.
Aesthetic Origins: Peter Viereck and the Imaginative Sources of Politics

Aesthetic Origins: Peter Viereck and the Imaginative Sources of Politics

Book by Jay Patrick Starliper
While it is gaining in academic prominence, discussion of the imagination is too often neglected. Society is dangerously unaware of the intimate relationship between culture and politics, ethics and aesthetics. ... Google Books
Originally published: 2014
Genre: Thesis
Starliper points out that Viereck identifies the indications of political disturbance in the cultural rise of the mass-man. The imagination is the leading ...
"Jay Starliper brings to light the work of Peter Viereck in a way that emphasizes the connections between aesthetics and politics.
Starliper, Jay Patrick (2014). Aesthetic origins: Peter Viereck and the imaginative sources of politics. New Brunswick: Transaction Publishers. Copy BIBTEX ...
AESTHETIC ORIGINS: PETER VIERECK AND THE IMAGINATIVE SOURCES OF POLITICS By Jay Patrick Starliper - Hardcover *Excellent Condition*.
Jay Patrick Starliper received his bachelor's degree in history ... He is the author of Aesthetic Origins: Peter Viereck and the Imaginative Sources of Politics.
Aesthetic Origins: Peter Viereck and the Imaginative Sources of Politics. by Starliper, Jay Patrick. Used; Hardcover. Condition: Used: Good; Edition: 1; Binding ...
Peter Viereck saw the portents of political disorder in the cultural ascension of the mass-man, a disease he labeled overadjustment.
Missing: Sources | Show results with:Sources