13 Matching Annotations
  1. Oct 2016
    1. what George Herbert Mead called “significant others.”8

      Taylor cites Mead to show that he is using Mead's term for his own purposes and adding to it.

    2. the topic of recognition is given its most influential earlytreatment in Hegel.13

      This reference seems out of place and unnecessary, but I think Taylor inserted it to give the historical starting place of one of his key terms. And, since it is Hegel, it lends his term credibility.

    3. an offshoot of the decline of hierarchical society.

      ... my earlier annotation.

    4. Not only shouldI not mold my life to the demands of external conformity; Ican’t even find the model by which to live outside myself. Ican only find it within.

      It seems like such a revelation would be expected to come from a society transitioning from an autocratic government with its "chain of being" to a democratic system in which everyone is equal.

    5. Their own self-depreciation, on thisview, becomes one of the most potent instruments of theirown oppression. Their first task ought to be to purge them-selves of this imposed and destructive identity.

      It struck me that this is a prideful position for mainstream society (white, male whatever), that they should have the power over minority groups to make them hate themselves. I don't see why any minority would internalize a negative image of themselves. Maybe an example: An Englishman might feel sorry for calling an Indian uncivilized, but he would be wrong to feel sorry for making the Indian feel uncivilized. The Indian probably thinks he's uncivilized. It is much more likely that the oppressed group would think poorly of their oppressors than agree with them: "No, you suck", not "yep, we suck".

    1. it gave furthergravity and sense of antiquity to the wine so-designated

      I don't understand why this would then increase the amount people were willing to pay. They aren't paying for wine because they can get other wine for a better price. They are spending more for economically devised authenticity, which is nothing.

    2. Benjamin (1969)argued that works of art lost something of their sacred aura in the present indus-trial era because they can be so easily reproduced. Thus only with the mass repro-duction of symbols does the authenticity of an art work emerge as a quality to beprized.

      Here, Peterson uses Benjamin to support his point that concern for authenticity has changed over time. Both authors are saying the same thing: Authenticity didn't used to be as big a deal because it was more difficult to fake.

    1. ken togethe

      mark

    2. sang them honestly and without affectation, making them his own without .imitating anyone else, and imbuing them with what \Ve can only call "personal authenticity"-the feeling that they were made out of his own tears and laughter, his own memories and dreams, his own life and everything in

      In my essay, I'm planning on challenging whether this is relevant. Sure, authenticity sounds like it would be critical to a good song, but it's not. The song itself is independent of whatever the singer brings to it. Music should be judged for what it is, not whatever the artist's background is.

    1. they’re more concerned aboutenjoying something the “right” way,

      Art in general cannot be enjoyed the "right way" because art is such a subjective experience. Specifically considering authenticity, a song like Thrift Shop can be the most fake thing in the world, but if it's listeners don't know that or even if they do, it can still be real.

  2. Sep 2016
    1. Rebecca Black would have a no. 1 record

      With this statement, Hyden could be saying a couple things. First, he actually agrees that "Harlem Shake" and "Thrift Shop" were awful because they were no. 1s. Second, being awful doesn't make it illegitimate.

    1. The writing of songs, for Dylan, would be inseparable, from thismoment on, from the making of records.

      This is an interesting development and claim. Because his songs are no longer just songs, is some authenticity lost? Does another motive inhibit authenticity?

  3. Aug 2016
    1. rather, the words of the speaker become my own words

      This line is especially relevant to the question of authenticity. Lyric poetry seeks to subvert what is unique, authentic about ourselves and make experience human and no longer personal, no longer authentic to some degree.