Creativity, society, and the hidden subtext of gender: Toward a new contextualized approach

World Futures 63 (7):479 – 499 (2007)
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Abstract

Conventional categories of creativity are being deconstructed after the so-called postmodern debate. This article takes this process deeper, to what we will show is the hidden subtext of gender underlying how creativity has been socially constructed. It also proposes a more contextualized approach to creativity that takes into account both its individual and social dimensions and how this relates to what Eisler (1987) has called a partnership rather than dominator model of society.

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