In taking the critique of inclusion and entry as a first step, Art’s
Way Out’s discussion of art, politics and learning aims to delineate
what an exit pedagogy would look like: where culture is neither seen
as a benign form of inclusion nor as a hegemonic veil by which we are
all subscribed to the system via popularized forms of artistic and
cultural immediacy. An exit pedagogy—as prefigured in what could be
called art’s way out through the implements of negative recognition
qua impasse—would not only avoid the all too facile symmetrical
dualism between conservative and progressive, liberal and critical
pedagogies, but also seek the continuous referral of such symmetries
by setting them aside and look for a way out of the confined edifices
of education and culture per se. An exit pedagogy seeks its way out by
reasserting representation in the comedic, the jocular, and more
effectively in the arts’ power of pausing, as that most effective
way by which aesthetics comes to effect in its autonomist and radical
essence. In this fluent, limpid, and scholarly work, Baldacchino
examines, inter alia, the problem of empathy in relation to art as an
event (or series of events), drawing upon a wide and rich range of
sources to inform what in effect is his manifesto. With a profound
understanding of its philosophical basis, Baldacchino unfolds his
argument in an internally consistent and elegantly structured way.
This is not a book to be ‘dipped into’, to do so would miss the
development of Baldacchino’s philosophical position; like an art
work itself, Art’s Way Out has coherent structure, and a complex,
interrelation between form and content, reflecting an artist’s
concern for getting things right. — Richard Hickman, Cambridge
University Although art has a limitless capacity to take on myriad
responsibilities, according to Baldacchino we also need to consider a
‘way out’ because only then will we understand how art goes beyond
the “boundaries ofpossibility.” As he explains, “our way into
reason also comes from an ability to move outside the limits that
reasons sets”. This is the ‘exit pedagogy’ that he advocates.
And here exit does not mean to leave, but rather to reach beyond, to
extend and explore outside the borders we impose on learning,
teaching, schooling and most forms of cultural agency. The need to
embrace the capacity of art to cycle beyond the contingencies we
impose on it also helps to clarify the limits of inclusive arguments
for deploying art education for various individual, institutional, and
socio-political ends: art as self expression, art as interdisciplinary
method, art as culture industry, art as political culture, art as
social justice and so on. This image invokes for me part of the legacy
of Maxine Greene that Baldacchino revealed in his earlier text,
Education Beyond Education (2009), when he explored her thesis of the
social imagination, which is best, achieved when teaching becomes
‘reaching.’ What Art’s Way Out gives us is an exit strategy from
the deadening tendency to ignore the enduring capacity of art to give
life to learning, teaching and the very culture of our being. —
Graeme Sullivan, Penn State University This is the sixth book authored
by John Baldacchino, the other most recent books being Education
Beyond Education. Self and the Imaginary in Maxine Greene’s
Philosophy (2009) and Makings of the Sea: Journey, Doubt, and
Nostalgia (2010). Currently Associate Dean at the School of Art &
Design, University College Falmouth in England, he was full time
member of faculty at Columbia University’s Teachers College in New
York, Gray’s School of Art in Scotland and Warwick University in
England. Front cover image: Monument to Marx / we should have spoken
more (2009) by Mike Ting
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9789460917943
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
Springer Nature
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter