Outrageous: Defending the art of free expression
Outrageous: Defending the art of free expression
Author(s): Brad Evans, Julian ReidSubject(s): Human Rights and Humanitarian Law, Ethics / Practical Philosophy, Political behavior, Politics and society, Sociology of Art
Published by: SAGE Publications Ltd
Keywords: Outrageous; Frida Kahlo; Oscar Wilde; Francis Bacon; Infidel; Jake and Dinos Chapman; Alexander McQueen;
Summary/Abstract: This essay makes a critical defence of free expression through the spirit of outrageousness. Drawing upon the ideas of Oscar Wilde, along with artists such as Frida Kahlo, Francis Bacon, Gilbert and George and Jake and Dinos Chapman, it looks beyond the current attempts to reduce the question of freedom to quintessential liberal tropes. In doing so, the paper both offers a critique of the moral absolutism that’s taken over certain sectors of the so-called ‘radical left’, while demanding more political appreciation for creatives and those with the abilities to reimagine the human subject. Such a critique not only suggests the need to rethink the meaning for freedom beyond the play of libertarians, but it also calls forth a new political subjectivity who appears timely and yet timeless – the much maligned and theoretically ignored figure of the infidel, who allows us to break free from moral entrapments.
- Issue Year: 30/2022
- Issue No: 1
- Page Range: 68-86
- Page Count: 19
- Language: English
- Content File-PDF