Literature DB >> 19856106

Creativity as openness: improvising health and care 'situations'.

James Oliver1.   

Abstract

Creativity has become an oft-used word in UK public policy, but perhaps it is also under-imagined. This paper contends that there is an instrumental tendency to narrowly frame creativity as innovation, implying a reproducible product, instead of more openly as improvisation, a situational, embodied and temporal process. This is not a simple dichotomy (innovation and improvisation, product and process, can be mutually informing concepts), nor is it specifically a question of definition; rather, it relates to an ontological orientation, and related to that are issues of epistemological implications. In particular the paper is concerned with the value of the arts in public policy, as situated in the social, and therefore human, spaces of health and care; and more generally the arts in society. The paper brings together a broad discussion from across disciplines, not in an interdisciplinary attempt to solve a problem, or to be reductive in the analysis, but to begin to approach a reorienting of understandings of creativity and the human value and foundation of the arts in society.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19856106     DOI: 10.1007/s10728-009-0133-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Health Care Anal        ISSN: 1065-3058


  1 in total

1.  Arts for health: still searching for the Holy Grail.

Authors:  C Hamilton; S Hinks; M Petticrew
Journal:  J Epidemiol Community Health       Date:  2003-06       Impact factor: 3.710

  1 in total
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1.  Ethnographic Evidence of an Emerging Transnational Arts Practice?: Perspectives on U.K. and Mexican Participatory Artists' Processes for Catalysing Change, and Facilitating Health and Flourishing.

Authors:  Anni Raw
Journal:  Anthropol Action       Date:  2014-03-01

2.  A Hole in the Heart: confronting the drive for evidence-based impact research in arts and health.

Authors:  A Raw; S Lewis; A Russell; J Macnaughton
Journal:  Arts Health       Date:  2012-06

3.  Clown's view as respiciō: looking respectfully to and after people with dementia.

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Journal:  Med Health Care Philos       Date:  2017-06
  3 in total

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