Dancing toward the light in the dark: COVID-19 changes and reflections on normal from Australia, Ireland and Mexico

Q1 Arts and Humanities
R. Jacobs, Michael Finneran, Tere Quintanilla D’Acosta
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

Abstract 2020 has been marked by disruption on a global scale due to a range of compounding crises including the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. Many community arts responses to the pandemic originated from individuals rather than by means of concerted or sustained sectoral responses. This paper uses reflections from Ireland, Australia, and Mexico to discuss the precariousness and vulnerability of the community arts sector and the artists and educators within it at this profoundly difficult time. We reflect upon some of the artistic and educational innovations and experimentations that have come about. We simultaneously examine the work of artists and arts organizations on a paradigmatic level by reflecting upon the role we play in perhaps involuntarily sustaining inequalities despite articulating a desire for change in the work that we do. We argue for the community arts sector to draw upon its imagination and bravery to reflect, assume responsibility, and recast the world into what we want it to be, rather than rebuilding the old, broken one in an attempt to return to what is perceived to be normal. Finally, in turning to arts education policy, we interrogate the barriers and enablers of change in the arts in a post-COVID world, discussing the influencing policy factors of sectoral weaknesses; individual resourcefulness and resilience; the desire for revolution; and the importance of love.
在黑暗中向光明跳舞:来自澳大利亚、爱尔兰和墨西哥的新冠肺炎变化和对正常的思考
由于包括正在进行的COVID-19大流行在内的一系列复杂危机,2020年在全球范围内受到了破坏。许多社区艺术对大流行病的反应来自个人,而不是通过协调一致或持续的部门反应。本文利用爱尔兰、澳大利亚和墨西哥的反思来讨论社区艺术部门以及其中的艺术家和教育工作者在这个极其困难的时期的不稳定性和脆弱性。我们反思了一些已经出现的艺术和教育创新和实验。我们同时审视艺术家和艺术组织的工作,通过反思我们在可能不自觉地维持不平等中所扮演的角色,尽管我们在工作中表达了改变的愿望。我们主张社区艺术界应发挥想象力和勇气,反思、承担责任,将世界重塑为我们想要的样子,而不是重建旧的、破碎的世界,试图回归到我们认为的正常状态。最后,在转向艺术教育政策时,我们询问了后covid世界中艺术变革的障碍和推动因素,讨论了部门弱点的影响政策因素;个人足智多谋和应变能力;革命的欲望;以及爱的重要性。
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来源期刊
Arts Education Policy Review
Arts Education Policy Review Arts and Humanities-Visual Arts and Performing Arts
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
30
期刊介绍: Arts Education Policy Review ( AEPR) presents discussion of major policy issues in arts education in the United States and throughout the world. Addressing education in music, visual arts, theatre, and dance, the journal presents a variety of views and emphasizes critical analysis. Its goal is to produce the most comprehensive and rigorous exchange of ideas available on arts education policy. Policy examinations from multiple viewpoints are a valuable resource not only for arts educators, but also for administrators, policy analysts, advocacy groups, parents, and audiences—all those involved in the arts and concerned about their role in education. AEPR focuses on analyses and recommendations focused on policy. The goal of any article should not be description or celebration (although reports of successful programs could be part of an article). Any article focused on a program (or programs) should address why something works or does not work, how it works, how it could work better, and most important, what various policy stakeholders (from teachers to legislators) can do about it. AEPR does not promote individuals, institutions, methods, or products. It does not aim to repeat commonplace ideas. Editors want articles that show originality, probe deeply, and take discussion beyond common wisdom and familiar rhetoric. Articles that merely restate the importance of arts education, call attention to the existence of issues long since addressed, or repeat standard solutions will not be accepted.
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