Solitary Soulmates: The Marginalized Role of Intellectuals and Artists Within American Higher Education: From an Address to the Newly Invested Members of Emory University Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa, 11 November 2002
The author makes the case that the role of the intellectual is to effect change, to challenge vested interests that would limit dialogue on matters of grave importance and to function as a public witness-bearer to personal and public forms of truth. He goes on to state, however, that this role canno...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Arts and humanities in higher education 2004-10, Vol.3 (3), p.317-330 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The author makes the case that the role of the intellectual is to effect change, to
challenge vested interests that would limit dialogue on matters of grave importance
and to function as a public witness-bearer to personal and public forms of truth. He
goes on to state, however, that this role cannot be properly fulfilled unless
narrow, purely scholastic interests are balanced by humanistic and artistic concerns
that address the whole nature of the human being. Education in, through and for the
arts is seen as complementary to more traditional modes of higher education.
Cultivating one’s aesthetic sensibility and emotional intelligence is
therefore of particularly vital importance in an age that has placed an inordinate
emphasis on work and material reward as distinct from living a creatively rich and
rewarding life. |
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ISSN: | 1474-0222 1741-265X |
DOI: | 10.1177/1474022204045741 |