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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: David Trend (University of California, Irvine)Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.589kg ISBN: 9780367275068ISBN 10: 0367275066 Pages: 326 Publication Date: 18 September 2019 Audience: College/higher education , Undergraduate , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsAnxious Creativity provides an important new perspective on the broader debate over the status of creativity in American society. The disciplinary frames for this debate are extremely diverse, including academic perspectives from educational theory, sociology and cultural studies, as well as a range of important public policy debates. In addressing this complex array of issues and political concerns Trend deploys an impressive range of references, including empirical studies, scientific research, journalistic reports and a myriad of sources in contemporary critical theory. The result is a unique set of commentaries on the question of creativity that will be of interest to scholars in an equally broad range of disciplines, as well as general readers. There are many books that focus specifically on new forms of participatory culture or media, crowd sourcing, etc. but no one has yet drawn this material into dialogue with broader debates around creativity and the creative class, theories of intersubjectivity, the arts and public policy. This book is destined to make an important contribution to policy debates over creativity and higher education. Grant Kester, University of California, San Diego From the advent of paint-by-number artist's kits to the publishing phenomenon of the adult coloring book to alleviate stress, from Apple's Think Different campaign to Google's DeepMind group, David Trend's Anxious Creativity maps the vast social domains where creativity is promised as a means to sooth the anxieties of Americans and solve the economic and political crises of capitalism's most recent twists and turns. Trend's encyclopedic knowledge of art, cultural, social and political theory, as well as of the ever-multiplying discourses surrounding art and creativity, make Anxious Creativity a necessary book for anyone working at the intersections of these fields. But perhaps even more important, for anyone who has ever picked up a creativity self-help book (Big Magic, anyone? The Artist's Way perhaps?) Anxious Creativity is a must read. Read this book and you'll never be able to think of creativity in quite the same way again. That makes Anxious Creativity a formidable act of creativity in itself. Micki McGee, Fordham University David Trend's Anxious Creativity: When Imagination Fails is deals with several topics that are crucially important at the moment. He explores the varieties of creativity discourses and the forces that foster and impede them, making a significant contribution to the sociological literature on these topics. The book will be very attractive to scholars in critical sociology, social and cultural studies in education, cultural theory, media studies, psychology, and technology studies. Kenneth Saltman Anxious Creativity provides an important new perspective on the broader debate over the status of creativity in American society. The disciplinary frames for this debate are extremely diverse, including academic perspectives from educational theory, sociology and cultural studies, as well as a range of important public policy debates. In addressing this complex array of issues and political concerns Trend deploys an impressive range of references, including empirical studies, scientific research, journalistic reports and a myriad of sources in contemporary critical theory. The result is a unique set of commentaries on the question of creativity that will be of interest to scholars in an equally broad range of disciplines, as well as general readers. There are many books that focus specifically on new forms of participatory culture or media, crowd sourcing, etc. but no one has yet drawn this material into dialogue with broader debates around creativity and the creative class, theories of intersubjectivity, the arts and public policy. This book is destined to make an important contribution to policy debates over creativity and higher education. Grant Kester, University of California, San Diego From the advent of paint-by-number artist's kits to the publishing phenomenon of the adult coloring book to alleviate stress, from Apple's Think Different campaign to Google's DeepMind group, David Trend's Anxious Creativity maps the vast social domains where creativity is promised as a means to sooth the anxieties of Americans and solve the economic and political crises of capitalism's most recent twists and turns. Trend's encyclopedic knowledge of art, cultural, social and political theory, as well as of the ever-multiplying discourses surrounding art and creativity, make Anxious Creativity a necessary book for anyone working at the intersections of these fields. But perhaps even more important, for anyone who has ever picked up a creativity self-help book (Big Magic, anyone? The Artist's Way perhaps?) Anxious Creativity is a must read. Read this book and you'll never be able to think of creativity in quite the same way again. That makes Anxious Creativity a formidable act of creativity in itself. Micki McGee, Associate Professor, Sociology and American Studies, Fordham University, USA. David Trend's Anxious Creativity: When Imagination Fails is deals with several topics that are crucially important at the moment. He explores the varieties of creativity discourses and the forces that foster and impede them, making a significant contribution to the sociological literature on these topics. The book will be very attractive to scholars in critical sociology, social and cultural studies in education, cultural theory, media studies, psychology, and technology studies. - Kenneth Saltman, University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth, USA. Author of Scripted Bodies: Corporate Power, Smart Technologies, and the Undoing of Public Education Author InformationDavid Trend is Professor at the University of California, Irvine. His books include Elsewhere in America: The Crisis of Belonging in Contemporary Culture (2016), Worlding (2012), and The End of Reading (2010). Honored as a Getty Scholar, he is a former editor of the journals Afterimage and Socialist Review. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |