Reference > The New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy
  PREVIOUS NEXT  
CONTENTS · INDEX · GUIDE · BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy, Third Edition.  2002.
 
Fine Arts
 
 
The term fine arts is equivalent to the older French term beaux arts, meaning “beautiful arts.” In ancient Greece, the fine arts were presided over by the Muses, whence the word museum—a place where fine arts are displayed. Because museums of fine arts have tended to display mainly painting and sculpture, these are the arts we first think of as belonging to the fine arts. But in fact they comprise all artistic works, including literature, architecture, drama, music, dance, opera, and even up-to-date forms such as television and movies. In fact, any work that is exceptionally well crafted may be so described, as in the oft-heard statement that somebody has raised furniture making or penmanship or bookbinding “to the level of a fine art.” Thomas de Quincey, an English writer of the early nineteenth century, entitled an essay “On Murder as One of the Fine Arts.”  1
  When people hear the term cultural literacy, they sometimes associate it with artistic culture—with opera, ballet, painting, poetry, sculpture, architecture, and classical music. These fine arts are, of course, only part of cultural literacy, but they do make up an important domain of experience that people must be aware of to communicate with other literate people in our society. For many people, the appreciation of the fine arts helps bring satisfaction, joy, and meaning to life; and every person deserves to be exposed to good art, whether popular or classical. But an old and true proverb tells us there is no disputing about taste. People who dislike ballet or Bach are not therefore unworthy or insensitive people. Nor is the art of our tradition inherently superior to that of other traditions. Yet every citizen does need an acquaintance with the enduring artistic works and artists of our tradition, if only because they are indispensable reference points for our shared lives.  2
  Not all of these enduring works of our tradition are permanent reference points—unchanging monuments that will never be replaced by new works of art. New classics sometimes displace older ones, just as new buildings rise upon old ruins. But our cities wisely discriminate among the buildings that they permit to be torn down. Some buildings, such as the White House, the Empire State Building, and the Taj Mahal, deserve to be preserved both because of their artistic excellence and because of their symbolic and communal associations.  3
  This section of our dictionary contains both the old and the new in the fine arts. Our principle for inclusion is not personal opinion about the merits of particular art or artists but our judgment of their established status as enduring points of reference in our culture. Everything that is included here is a classic—not because it is old or new, but because it has achieved broad currency. People refer to these works and artists without explanation, assuming that we will understand their reference. The arts are not just occasions for private appreciation and enrichment. Many of the images and songs and poems in our shared life are not only fine art but also indispensable symbols of our national existence. Indeed, much fine art of the past was not just something to be admired for its beauty but also something to be understood as part of public life. Bach’s religious music, the Egyptian pyramids, the Washington Monument, the American flag, and patriotic songs were and are living parts of communal life. The image of the cross and of the Star of David are more than formal designs. At their most reverberant, the fine arts are not just objects for private pleasure and contemplation but essential symbols that have helped define what we collectively are.
—E.D.H.
  4
Entries
 
a cappella abstract art abstract expressionism
Academy Awards Acropolis adagio
Adams, Ansel “Adeste Fideles” Aïda
Albee, Edward allegro Allen, Woody
alto “Amazing Grace” “America”
“America the Beautiful” American Gothic Anderson, Marian
arch aria Armstrong, Louis
art for art’s sake Astaire, Fred Audubon, John James
“Auld Lang Syne” Bach, Johann Sebastian Baker, Josephine
ballad ballerina ballet
banjo The Barber of Seville barbershop singing
baritone Barnum, Phineas T. baroque
Barrymore family Basie, Count basilica
bas-relief bass bass drum
bass viol bassoon baton
“Battle Hymn of the Republic” Bauhaus Beale Street
Beatles Beethoven, Ludwig van Benny, Jack
Bergman, Ingmar Berlin, Irving Bernhardt, Sarah
Bernstein, Leonard Berry, Chuck Big Ben
The Birth of a Nation The Birth of Venus Bizet, Georges
bluegrass blues “Blue-Tail Fly”
Bogart, Humphrey bohemian Bolshoi Theater
Bosch, Hieronymus Botticelli, Sandro Brahms, Johannes
Brando, Marlon brass brass band
Broadway Brooklyn Bridge Brueghel, Pieter, the Elder
Buffalo Bill Bunker, Archie Calder, Alexander
“Camptown Races” cantata capital
Capitol, United States caricature Carmen
Carnegie Hall Caruso, Enrico Casablanca
Casals, Pablo “Casey Jones” Cassatt, Mary
cathedral cello Cézanne, Paul
Chagall, Marc chamber music Chaplin, Charlie
Charleston Chartres, Cathedral of Chopin, Frédéric
chord choreography clarinet
classic classical music “Clementine”
coda Cohan, George M. coloratura
Colosseum “Coming Through the Rye” concerto
Constable, John contralto Copland, Aaron
Corbusier, Le Corinthian Cosby, Bill
counterpoint country and western music crescendo
Crosby, Bing Crystal Palace cubism
cupola Currier and Ives cymbal
Dali, Salvador David de Kooning, Willem
Debussy, Claude “Deck the Halls” Degas, Edgar
dilettante Disney, Walt “Dixie”
Dixieland Don Giovanni Doric
double bass “Down in the Valley” “The Drunken Sailor”
Duncan, Isadora Dürer, Albrecht Dylan, Bob
Eiffel Tower Ellington, Duke Empire State Building
engraving Escher, M. C. etching
expressionism fiddle Fields, W. C.
fife fine arts Fitzgerald, Ella
flute flying buttress folk music
forte fortissimo Foster, Stephen
French horn fresco frieze
functionalism Garbo, Greta gargoyle
Gauguin, Paul Gershwin, George Gilbert and Sullivan
Giotto “God Bless America” Goldberg, Rube
Golden Gate Bridge Goodman, Benny gospel music
Gothic Goya, Francisco Graham, Martha
Great Wall of China Greco, El Gregorian chant
Griffith, D. W. Gropius, Walter guitar
Guthrie, Woody Hagia Sophia, Cathedral of “Hail to the Chief”
“Hallelujah Chorus” Hammerstein, Oscar, II Handel, George Frederick
harmony harp harpsichord
Haydn, Franz Josef Hendrix, Jimi Hepburn, Katharine
hip-hop Hitchcock, Alfred “Home on the Range”
“Home, Sweet Home” Homer, Winslow Hope, Bob
Hopper, Edward Houdini, Harry I never met a man I didn’t like
icon impresario impressionism
Ionic “I’ve Been Working on the Railroad” jazz
“John Brown’s Body” “John Henry” Jolly Roger
Joplin, Scott “Joshua Fit the Battle of Jericho” Justice
Kandinsky, Wassily kettledrum key
Key, Francis Scott King Kong kitsch
Klee, Paul The Last Supper Laurel and Hardy
Leaning Tower of Pisa leitmotif Leonardo da Vinci
liberal arts Liberty Bell lieder
Lincoln Memorial Liszt, Franz “Loch Lomond”
Louvre Madame Butterfly Madonna
Madonna maestro The Magic Flute
Mahler, Gustav Manet, Edouard The Marriage of Figaro
“The Marseillaise” Marx brothers M*A*S*H
Mass Matisse, Henri mausoleum
Mendelssohn, Felix Messiah Metropolitan Museum of Art
Metropolitan Opera mezzo soprano Michelangelo
The Mikado Miller, Glenn Mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the Lord
mobile Mona Lisa Mondrian, Piet
Monet, Claude Monroe, Marilyn montage
Monticello Monty Python Moonlight Sonata
Moore, Henry mosaic Moses, Grandma
movement Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus mural
musical musical comedy My country, ’tis of thee
My Fair Lady National Anthem of the United States National Gallery of Art
naturalism Nijinsky, Vaslav Ninth Symphony
“Nobody Knows the Trouble I’ve Seen” Notre Dame de Paris, Cathedral of Now I lay me down to sleep
The Nutcracker O beautiful for spacious skies “O Come, All Ye Faithful”
oboe octave off-Broadway
“Oh! Susanna” O’Keeffe, Georgia Oklahoma!
“Ol’ Man River” Olivier, Laurence “On Top of Old Smoky”
“Onward Christian Soldiers” opera operetta
oratorio orchestra Oscar
“Over There” overture pagoda
Palladio, Andrea Parthenon Pavarotti, Luciano
“Peanuts” percussion perspective
Peter and the Wolf pianissimo piano
pianoforte piazza Picasso, Pablo
piccolo Pietà Pinafore, H.M.S.
polka Pollock, Jackson pop art
Porgy and Bess Porter, Cole postmodernism
Prado, Museo del Presley, Elvis prima ballerina
primitivism Puccini, Giacomo punk
pyramids quartet quintet
ragtime rap Raphael
recitative recorder reed
reggae Rembrandt Renoir, Pierre-Auguste
Requiem Rhapsody in Blue rhythm
Ring of the Nibelung Rivera, Diego Robeson, Paul
rock ’n’ roll Rockwell, Norman rococo
Rodgers, Richard Rodin, Auguste Rogers, Ginger
Rogers, Will Romanesque romanticism
Rothko, Mark round “Row, Row, Row Your Boat”
Rubens, Peter Paul Rubinstein, Arthur “Saint Louis Blues”
Saint Paul’s Cathedral Saint Peter’s Basilica saxophone
Scala, La scale Schubert, Franz
Schulz, Charles M. Schumann, Robert Sears Tower
“Sesame Street” “Silent Night” Sistine Chapel
skull and crossbones snare drum sonata
soprano Sousa, John Philip sousaphone
Sphinx Spielberg, Steven The Spirit of ’76
spirituals Springsteen, Bruce staccato
“The Star-Spangled Banner” Star Trek Star Wars
Stars and Stripes “The Stars and Stripes Forever” Statue of Liberty
Stern, Isaac Stewart, James Stoppard, Tom
Stradivarius Strauss, Johann, the Younger Strauss, Richard
Stravinsky, Igor string quartet strings
Stuart, Gilbert suite “Summertime”
surrealism Swan Lake swing
“Swing Low, Sweet Chariot” symphony Taj Mahal
“Take Me Out to the Ball Game” tango Taylor, Elizabeth
Tchaikovsky, Peter Ilyich “Te Deum” tempo
tenor The Thinker “This Land Is Your Land”
Tiffany glass timpani Tin Pan Alley
Titian Toscanini, Arturo Toulouse-Lautrec, Henri de
trombone trumpet tuba
Turner, Joseph Mallord William Uffizi Gallery ukulele
unison van Gogh, Vincent vaudeville
Velázquez, Diego de Venus de Milo Verdi, Giuseppe
Vermeer, Jan Versailles, Palace of Vietnam Memorial
viola violin Vivaldi, Antonio
Wagner, Richard Warhol, Andy Washington Crossing the Delaware
Washington Mall Washington Monument Water Music
Wayne, John Welles, Orson West, Mae
“When Johnny Comes Marching Home” “When the Saints Go Marching In” Whistler, James
Whistler’s Mother “White Christmas” White House
whole tone wind instruments woodwinds
Wren, Christopher Wright, Frank Lloyd Wyeth, Andrew
“Yankee Doodle” “Yankee Doodle Dandy”
 
 
The New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy, Third Edition. Edited by E.D. Hirsch, Jr., Joseph F. Kett, and James Trefil. Copyright © 2002 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

CONTENTS · INDEX · GUIDE · BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
  PREVIOUS NEXT  
 
Google
Click here to shop the Bartleby Bookstore.
Welcome · Press · Advertising · Linking · Terms of Use · © 2008 Bartleby.com