This essay discusses reformational aesthetics as a religious and intellectual tradition that is distinct from Evangelical and sacramental traditions. It uses debates among Hans Rookmaaker, Calvin Seerveld, and Nicholas Wolterstorff to point this tradition in a new direction, one that replaces modern notions of worldview, artworks, and aesthetics with an emphasis on public interaction, cultural practices, and interdisciplinary studies.
A Tradition Transfigured: Art and Culture in Reformational Aesthetics.
This essay discusses reformational aesthetics as a religious and intellectual tradition that is distinct from Evangelical and sacramental traditions. It uses debates among Hans Rookmaaker, Calvin Seerveld, and Nicholas Wolterstorff to point this tradition in a new direction, one that replaces modern notions of worldview, artworks, and aesthetics with an emphasis on public interaction, cultural practices, and interdisciplinary studies.