Explaining Creativity: The Science of Human InnovationOxford University Press, 19 янв. 2006 г. - Всего страниц: 368 Explaining Creativity is an accessible introduction to the latest scientific research on creativity. In the last 50 yearss, psychologists, anthropologists, and sociologists have increasingly studied creativity, and we now know more about creativity that at any point in history. Explaining Creativity considers not only arts like painting and writing, but also science, stage performance, and business innovation. Until about a decade ago, creativity researchers tended to focus on highly valued activities like fine art painting and Nobel prize winning science. Sawyer brings this research up to date by including movies, music videos, cartoons, videogames, hypertext fiction, and computer technology. For example, this is the first book on creativity to include studies of performance and improvisation. Sawyer draws on the latest research findings to show the importance of collaboration and context in all of these creative activities. Today's science of creativity is interdisciplinary; in addition to psychological studies of creativity, Explaining Creativity includes research by anthropologists on creativity in non-Western cultures, and research by sociologists about the situations, contexts, and networks of creative activity. Explaining Creativity brings these approaches together within the sociocultural approach to creativity pioneered by Howard Becker, Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi and Howard Gardner. The sociocultural approach moves beyond the individual to consider the social and cultural contexts of creativity, emphasizing the role of collaboration and context in the creative process. |
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Стр. 4
... discovered that explaining creativity requires understanding not only individual inspiration but also social factors like collaboration, networks of support, education, and cultural background. In this book, I explain creativity by ...
... discovered that explaining creativity requires understanding not only individual inspiration but also social factors like collaboration, networks of support, education, and cultural background. In this book, I explain creativity by ...
Стр. 5
... discovered that flow and creativity contribute to a happy, fulfilling life (Csikszentmihalyi, 1990b). A better ... discovering the role that creativity plays in development and learning (Sawyer et al., 2003). In recent decades ...
... discovered that flow and creativity contribute to a happy, fulfilling life (Csikszentmihalyi, 1990b). A better ... discovering the role that creativity plays in development and learning (Sawyer et al., 2003). In recent decades ...
Стр. 8
... discovered about creativity. Every bookstore contains books about creativity, but almost none of them are based on solid scientific research. Instead of reporting scientific findings, they often give new words to old, unexamined beliefs ...
... discovered about creativity. Every bookstore contains books about creativity, but almost none of them are based on solid scientific research. Instead of reporting scientific findings, they often give new words to old, unexamined beliefs ...
Стр. 10
... discovered that those artists who focused on intrinsic motivation in art school in the 1960s—the joy of the “flow” state—generated the most creative paintings. And ten years later, they had the most successful careers. In the 1980s and ...
... discovered that those artists who focused on intrinsic motivation in art school in the 1960s—the joy of the “flow” state—generated the most creative paintings. And ten years later, they had the most successful careers. In the 1980s and ...
Стр. 18
... discovered that creativity is mostly conscious, hard work. For example, we now know that very few geniuses come up with one amazingly brilliant idea and then fade from the scene. Rather, in both the sciences and the arts, the most ...
... discovered that creativity is mostly conscious, hard work. For example, we now know that very few geniuses come up with one amazingly brilliant idea and then fade from the scene. Rather, in both the sciences and the arts, the most ...
Содержание
37 | |
Contextualist Approaches | 115 |
Artistic Creativity | 175 |
Everyday Creativity | 261 |
Epilogue | 315 |
References | 319 |
Index | 347 |
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19th century actors argued art world Artificial creators artists associated ativity audience began believe brain can’t career chapter cognitive collaborative complex composed conceptions of creativity conventions convergent thinking created creative domain creative process creative products creativity myths creativity requires creativity research Csikszentmihalyi culture culture’s developed divergent thinking doesn’t electronica emerge emphasize evaluation everyday example experience explain creativity explanation of creativity field Figure focus genius genres hard historical historiometric human idea important improvisation incubation individual innovation inspiration installation art jazz learned mental illness mini-insights modern musicians novel ofthe Organ original outsider art Pablo Picasso painters painting performance personality psychology Picasso play problem problem-finding psychologists result role Sawyer scientific scientists script selection Simonton social society sociocultural approach song stage story studies of creativity style theater theory there’s they’re thought Thought Experiments tion unique Wham-O writing Xerox PARC