Reference no: EM133336428
Questions:
1. Given the evidence we've seen that artists use their art to deal with trauma, and patients use art therapy to deal with trauma, what is it that separates an artist from a patient if both are engaged in the same activity? Why is Van Gogh more famous than the patients Melissa Walker describes?
2. For Karl Marx, the "use-value" of a coat is its warmth. This is what you pay for. What is the "use-value" of art? What use-values does the art industry produce that might be separate from its actual products? Give an example.
3. What specifically can art do for political or social issues that cannot be done by other forms of production, e.g., journalism, history, organizing, legislation, etc.? Give an example that's important to you.
4. Do you ever worry that the art or entertainment you're consuming is bad for you, for your mental health, for society, etc.? If so, why, and give an example. If not, can you explain what steps you've taken to avoid this?
5. Is it possible for art to be apolitical, for it to have meaning separate from its social and political context? Would it be desirable? If so, is that true only for fleeting moments, or can it be true permanently? If not, would it ever be possible? Possible in a different world?)