1st Edition

Creativity and Improvised Educations Case Studies for Understanding Impact and Implications

By Michael Hanchett Hanson Copyright 2021
    238 Pages 21 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    238 Pages 21 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Examining the improvised relationships among lifelong learning, formal education, and creativity, this volume provides detailed case studies of the creative work of people from a wide variety of fields. Each profile allows readers to explore how real people’s distinctive points of view, senses of purpose, and ultimate contributions developed through participation in complex worlds. By looking at creativity as a distributed and participatory process, these cases deconstruct the myth of solitary creative genius, while exploring applications of complexity theory to creative work and raising new questions for creativity research. Providing a framework for thinking about education, agency, and change, this book is valuable for both students and researchers seeking concrete ways to broaden their understanding of creativity in practice.   

    Introduction: Uncertain Times  1. Participating through Theater   2. Participating through Neurology   3. Participating through Cuisine   4. Participating through Knitting   5. Participating through Revolution: Mao   6. Participating through Revolution: Dewantara  Conclusion: Creative Work, Improvisation, and Participation 

    Biography

    Michael Hanchett Hanson is a developmental psychologist; Director of the Masters Concentration in Creativity and Cognition at Teachers College, Columbia University; a founding member and Secretary of the International Society for the Study of Creativity and Innovation (ISSCI); and President of Contexts R+D, a research and consulting practice.