Artists All: Creativity, the University, and the World

Artists All: Creativity, the University, and the World

by Burton Raffel (Author)

Synopsis

Basic human drives--curiosity, passion, the need to provide shape and structure, the excitement of discovery--underlie all human creativity. Different minds and sensibilities necessarily focus on different aspects of human experience. However, in our educational systems and professional lives, we give undue and untrue emphasis to our differences rather than to our similarities. In Artists All Burton Raffel demonstrates that the creative force in the natural and social sciences is essentially the same as the creative energies of the arts; that the arts and aesthetic experiences frequently inspire insight in scientists and sociologist; that the arts themselves, though mutually untranslatable, share a deep unity; that disciplinary boundaries and divisions can frequently stunt creativity; that what we chose to call artistic creativity is nothing more or less than the heightened engagement of human beings with themselves, their fellows, and their environment ; and that there is always a link between what artists produce and their stance toward their society's place and posture in the world.

When used to define intellectual disciplines, the very word Interdisciplinary is a misnomer, almost a contradiction in terms, Raffel contends, because it implies boundaries rather than interconnectedness and interrelationships. Since it is his own primary concern, Raffel uses literature as a touchstone, analyzing its relationships with social science, natural science, music, and the visual arts. He then provides practical recommendations, addressed to the academic community as a whole, about ways of restructuring universities to reflect functioning interdisciplinary realities rather than convenient but artificial and seriously constrictive disciplinary boundaries. Written with humor and sensitivity, Artists All makes a significant contribution to current thinking about higher education.

$40.03

Quantity

20+ in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 172
Publisher: Pennsylvania State University Press
Published: 01 Jan 1991

ISBN 10: 9780271027
ISBN 13: 9780271027289

Media Reviews

Artists All is a spirited defense--against specialization, materialism, and relative philistinism of the contemporary academic marketplace--of the ideals and conceptions of post-enlightenment art and esthetics, of artistic individuality and the essentially modern idea of originality.

--Frederick Turner, University of Texas, Dallas

Author Bio

Burton Raffel is Distinguished Professor of Humanities at the University of Southwestern Louisiana, Lafayette. He is the author of The Art of Translating Poetry (Penn State,1988), How to Read a Poem (1984), and T.S. Eliot (1982, 1991) and translator of Beowulf (1963), Chr tien de Troyes's Yvain (1987), and Rabelais's Gargantua and Pantagruel (1990).