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Creativity, Society and the Hidden Subtext of Gender

By Riane Eisler and Alfonso Montuori. Working to outline a gender-holistic, contextual perspective on creativity, Dr. Eisler and Dr. Montuori point to the need to view creativity as embedded in a particular set of social relations and discuss how to move creativity from a base of dominator dynamics to one incorporating partnership. Providing support for the intention and work to help creativity become more ungendered and contextualized, thus transforming not only creativity, but the social and moral web of human relationships.

Creativity, Society, and the Hidden Subtext of Gender.pdf — PDF document, 182Kb

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