Wednesday 4th March: Renee Conroy, Department of Philosophy, Purdue University 
at Calumet: 'Rust Belt Ruins'
Venue: Seminar Room, 1 Newnham Terrace, Darwin College. (Enter by main door).
Time: 5.00pm to 7.00pm
Admission is free, and all are welcome.


Abstract: American political satirist P. J. O'Rourke observes, "Detroit's 
industrial ruins are picturesque, like crumbling Rome in an 18th century 
etching". I argue that O'Rourke's claim should be taken literally: the 
crumbling pockets of urban decay that famously dot major cities in America's 
so-called "rust belt" belong to the aesthetic category 'ruins'. While sites of 
recent urban devastation have a distinctive aesthetic character, they are 
nonetheless of an appreciative piece with those iconic structures from ancient 
times we relish in virtue of their incompleteness and their capacity to incite 
sustained reflection on things past.



The body of literature in this corner of aesthetics remains unfortunately 
small, but one shared thesis emerges clearly from extant work in this area, 
viz., that age-value is central to our aesthetic regard for ruins. Hence, 
according to the traditional model, sites of contemporary ruination in places 
like Detroit, Michigan do not count as genuine ruins. They are, at best, ruins 
in a metaphorical or analogical sense. By considering carefully Carolyn 
Korsmeyer's recent account of ruins as objects of aesthetic regard (Journal of 
Aesthetics and Art Criticism, Fall 2014), I argue that philosophers of art have 
overlooked an important appreciative category - that of "rust belt ruins" - and 
that this category can be subsumed under traditional theories of ruin 
appreciation.





Derek Matravers
Professor of Philosophy, The Open University.
Media Fellow, Arts Faculty.

-- The Open University is incorporated by Royal Charter (RC 000391), an exempt 
charity in England & Wales and a charity registered in Scotland (SC 038302). 
The Open University is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct 
Authority.
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