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OverviewThis volume explores the dynamic dialogue of art within society from a multitude of perspectives across the world. It highlights art as a process that is interwoven with notions of physical and metaphysical transition and represents a fundamental awareness of how art is represented and shaped through everyday social challenges. The chapters in this volume link the idea of symbolic universes with social practices of art in different societies and through different historical epochs, under the assumption that art leads the development of cultural systems underlying society. The volume looks at art that is shaped by forgotten or/and hidden perspectives. It suggests that art may have crucial, phenomenologically approachable variations that have been misunderstood in the scientific fields. The work considers art and science as complementary, instead of as counterparts/opposing forces. Divided into an introductory and four thematic parts, the volume reflects on historical signs preserved in artwork; explores the meaning behind art and the experience of cultural cultivation; delves into the dynamic shaping of creative expression through art; and, finally, looks at the artists’ own experiences of performance. This volume is of interest to researchers and students in the fields of cultural psychology, semiotics, arts and aesthetics, and cultural studies. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Marc Antoine Campill , Lia Lordelo , Katrin KullaseppPublisher: Springer International Publishing AG Imprint: Springer International Publishing AG ISBN: 9783031989599ISBN 10: 3031989597 Pages: 241 Publication Date: 02 October 2025 Audience: Professional and scholarly , College/higher education , Professional & Vocational , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Not yet available ![]() This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release. Table of ContentsIntroduction.- Symbolic universes in transition: Value of Art & Artist.- Hyper-Generalized Encodings.- The Making of a Heroine: The power of beauty.- Head on a Plate: The making of a social representation.- From Desire to Revenge: Psychology of affective reversals.- Memento Mori: Signs of Death in Artworks from Europe.- Breaking Out of the Traditional Schemes: Enhancing Individual Symbolism.- Depicting movement in sports photography: projecting individual dynamic context into static artworks.- Externalization of imagination: Where we begin to create our own representations of artwork.- Transdisciplinary awareness for psychology: Art in science.- Where the Sea Turns Yellow: Shimadachi – Awakening to the Shades of Aesthetic Moments of Life.- Fairy tales as cultural resources for children’s emotional development.- From Creative Expression to Art and Transition.- The synthesis of artistic expression and emotion: The ancient Indian concept of Rasa.- Budda versus Hanuman in an existential dilemma: from autoethnographic experience to the creation of a theoretical model.- Making art: creating an alternative world.- Artists in Society.- Choreography as an ethical technology.- Creating common time: shared rhythms and spontaneous musicality in Latin American cities' 'old centres'.- Not clear enough: the return of the discourse in lecture-performances in Brazil.- Discussion.- The Complexity of Symbolic Universes: Where we transform while being in transition.ReviewsAuthor InformationMarc Antoine Campill is a Ph.D. student in psychology at the Università degli Studi di Salerno, italy. His current field interests are influenced by the cultural psychological understandings of the “individuum”, bonded to the inner identification process and meaning generation –- concerning constructs such as pleromatic, Imagination, and MyCu-cultivation. He is dedicated to generating new psychological perspectives by transdisciplinary, integrating the social construction of common knowledge and the scientific meaning of other Naturwissenschaften into the contemporary psychological field. Main focus in his current works are new ways to approach art as science. Katrin Kullasepp is Associate Professor at the School of Natural Sciences and Health, Tallinn University, Estonia. Dr. Kullasepp’s scientific interests concern cultural psychology and her research focuses on development of identity, including students’ professional identity construction and national identity formation. Lia da Rocha Lordelo is Professor of Artistic Languages and Psychology at the Universidade Federal da Bahia (UFBA/UEFS). She has a master’s in education, philosophy and history of the sciences (2007), and a doctorate in social psychology from the graduate program in psychology of UFBA. She has experience and training in performing arts, mainly through the group Dimenti, and for more than 15 years has been an actress, dancer, and singer in artistic performances. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |