""SPECULATIONS. Essays on Humanism and the Philosophy of Art."" is a seminal collection of writings by T. E. Hulme, a foundational figure in the development of Modernist thought. This volume, edited by Herbert Read, brings together Hulme's most influential theories on aesthetics, politics, and philosophy. The essays explore the rejection of Romanticism in favor of a new ""classicism,"" arguing for a geometric and abstract approach to art that reflects the complexities of the modern era.
Hulme's critiques of humanism and his defense of objective values provided the intellectual groundwork for the Imagist movement in poetry and revolutionized contemporary artistic criticism. Throughout the work, readers will find profound meditations on the nature of reality, the role of the artist in society, and the shift from naturalistic representation to formal abstraction. Including insights into the transformation of visual and literary culture, and featuring a foreword by sculptor Jacob Epstein, ""SPECULATIONS"" remains an essential text for anyone seeking to understand the philosophical underpinnings of early 20th-century modernism and the transition from traditional to modern sensibilities.
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