- Thu Sep 08, 2016 11:35 am
#28436
Hi mokkyukkyu,
The last paragraph was indeed slightly confusing, but it is consistent with the overall purpose of the passage - to convince us that Taruskin's analysis, and others like it, are overly simplistic.
Contrary to what Taruskin seems to imply, the author observes that a lot of art went against the grain of elite values. Imagine an "elite value" among the elite in the 18th century was a spiritual or platonic attitude in love. If an 18th century artist depicted a highly erotic scene, for instance, that would ostensibly go against the grain of an elite value, and the elite would probably disapprove of it. So, how do you reconcile this fact with Taruskin's belief that art is produced "by and for the elite"? Well, we need to assume that the erotic scene actually embodied a platonic attitude in love: the elite just couldn't see it as such.
Does that make sense?
Thanks,
Nikki Siclunov
PowerScore Test Preparation