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Disfiguring: Art, Architecture, Religion

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Disfiguring is the first sustained interpretation of the deep but often hidden links among twentieth-century art, architecture, and religion. While many of the greatest modern painters and architects have insisted on the spiritual significance of their work, historians of modern art and architecture have largely avoided questions of religion. Likewise, contemporary philosophers and theologians have, for the most part, ignored visual arts. Taylor presents a carefully structured and subtly nuanced analysis of the religious presuppositions that inform recent artistic theory and practice—and, in doing so, recasts the cultural landscape of our era.

360 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1992

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About the author

Mark C. Taylor

53 books35 followers
Mark C. Taylor, Ph.D. (Religious Studies, Harvard University, 1973; B.A., Wesleyan University, 1968), is a philosopher of religion who chaired the Department of Religion at Columbia University 2007–2015. Previously, he was Cluett Professor of Humanities at Williams College (Williamstown, Massachusetts), where he began his teaching career in 1973.

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Profile Image for Justin Banger.
151 reviews17 followers
May 4, 2015
this reads like an art history/philosophy text book.... It is quite tantalizing, but may take me a year to finish....im taking notes though...sort of.
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