Kitsch and Morality

Throughout the realm of aesthetics there is the general sentiment that kitsch is inherently immoral. Although kitsch itself is a relatively ambiguous term, objects falling into this category are charged with a negative ethical stigma due to their being sentimental and manipulative. In this paper, I...

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Main Author: Aziz Alfailakawi
Format: Article
Language:ces
Published: University of Presov, Faculty of Arts 2025-01-01
Series:ESPES
Subjects:
Online Access:https://espes.ff.unipo.sk/index.php/ESPES/article/view/325
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author Aziz Alfailakawi
author_facet Aziz Alfailakawi
author_sort Aziz Alfailakawi
collection DOAJ
description Throughout the realm of aesthetics there is the general sentiment that kitsch is inherently immoral. Although kitsch itself is a relatively ambiguous term, objects falling into this category are charged with a negative ethical stigma due to their being sentimental and manipulative. In this paper, I articulate the shakiness of the claim that kitsch is immoral by first comparing three accounts of kitsch to demonstrate how the term “kitsch” can be applied (or denied) to various aesthetic objects. I then argue that the charges of sentimentality and manipulation create further ambiguities regarding kitsch. I conclude that although certain objects can be kitsch, to categorically denounce kitsch on an ethical basis is too strong a claim.
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institution Kabale University
issn 1339-1119
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publisher University of Presov, Faculty of Arts
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spelling doaj-art-03783b9193f9461aaf65a6bd979ce4a62025-01-31T10:48:37ZcesUniversity of Presov, Faculty of ArtsESPES1339-11192025-01-01132243610.5281/zenodo.14762349274Kitsch and MoralityAziz Alfailakawi0Loyola University ChicagoThroughout the realm of aesthetics there is the general sentiment that kitsch is inherently immoral. Although kitsch itself is a relatively ambiguous term, objects falling into this category are charged with a negative ethical stigma due to their being sentimental and manipulative. In this paper, I articulate the shakiness of the claim that kitsch is immoral by first comparing three accounts of kitsch to demonstrate how the term “kitsch” can be applied (or denied) to various aesthetic objects. I then argue that the charges of sentimentality and manipulation create further ambiguities regarding kitsch. I conclude that although certain objects can be kitsch, to categorically denounce kitsch on an ethical basis is too strong a claim.https://espes.ff.unipo.sk/index.php/ESPES/article/view/325kitschmoralityethicsaestheticssentimentalitymanipulation
spellingShingle Aziz Alfailakawi
Kitsch and Morality
ESPES
kitsch
morality
ethics
aesthetics
sentimentality
manipulation
title Kitsch and Morality
title_full Kitsch and Morality
title_fullStr Kitsch and Morality
title_full_unstemmed Kitsch and Morality
title_short Kitsch and Morality
title_sort kitsch and morality
topic kitsch
morality
ethics
aesthetics
sentimentality
manipulation
url https://espes.ff.unipo.sk/index.php/ESPES/article/view/325
work_keys_str_mv AT azizalfailakawi kitschandmorality