[Gamasutra features director Christian Nutt jumps into the debate over the aesthetics of Platinum Games’ Bayonetta, exploring context for “taste” in the history of popular culture.]Late last year I read a fascinating book (thanks, Randy) called Let’s Talk About Love: A Journey To The End of Taste. Written by music critic Carl Wilson, it’s a part of the 33 1/3 series — book-length examinations of albums. In the series, there are books — unsurprisingly — on albums such as Radiohead’s OK Computer, The Beatles’ Let it Be, My Bloody Valentine’s Loveless, and Bob Dylan’s Highway 61 Revisited, among many others. This is stuff that rock critics and serious music fans think are classics. Wilson’s book, in contrast, stands alone: it’s about Celine Dion’s Let’s Talk About Love, her 1997 album — the one with the Titanic theme, My Heart Will Go On. There are two important facts that make the book as fascinating as it is. For one, Let’s Talk About Love is one of the most popular albums of all time, having sold over 31 million copies worldwide; conversely, nobody who professes to be a fan of music would be caught dead listening to Celine Dion.Wilson’s book, then, is…