Lightning and frenzy: Music education, adolescence, and the anxiety of influence

Educational Philosophy and Theory 37 (3):431–440 (2005)
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Abstract

Drawing on themes found in James Marshall's writings on Nietzsche, the arts and the self, this paper explores the nature of influence in the arts and its relevance to education. It considers what Harold Bloom has called the ‘anxiety of influence’ and amplifies this in terms of broader questions concerning Emersonian self‐reliance. The particular twist these matters take in the lives of adolescents presents special problems for education in the arts—not least in view of the dangers of self‐deception, affectation and pretentiousness—and raises in turn questions about the relation between high art and popular art. These matters connect also with questions concerning the kinds of vocabularies and ways of thought into which young people need to be initiated if they are to develop creatively and authentically

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Paul Standish
University College London

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References found in this work

Walden.Sheila A. Laffey, Henry David Thoreau, Fred Cardin, Douglas S. Clapp & John D. Ogden - 1981 - First Run/Icarus Films (Distributor).
Emerson’s Transcendental Etudes.Stanley Cavell - 2003 - Stanford University Press.
Education in an age of nihilism.Nigel Blake (ed.) - 2000 - New York: Routledge/Falmer.
Lyotard: just education.Pradeep Ajit Dhillon & Paul Standish (eds.) - 2000 - New York: Routledge.

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