Texture and (Arts) Education -Encouraging Attention, Awareness and Sensitivity
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/27392Date
2022-05-10Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
In this article, the complexities of the concept of texture and its relationship to (arts)
education, here with a specific focus on attention, awareness and sensitivity, are
explored and elaborated upon. Texture can be described simply as the visual and tactile
character of surfaces, which covers both nature and culture and, indeed, much of life
itself. The overall aim of the article is to explore the following: (i) (arts) education
through the lens of texture; (ii) texture, education and the arts as they relate to bodily
and sensory experiences; and (iii) texture and (arts) education in relation to silence,
silent spaces and repetition. The ultimate goal is to develop theoretical and philosophical insights into diverse understandings of texture as they relate to (arts)
education as a way to illuminate and sharpen the sentience and appreciation of its
meaning and importance for students in the classroom. The article is theoretically
founded on the thinking of the French philosophers Maurice Merleau-Ponty and
Mikel Dufrenne. The ways in which texture, education and the arts are related to
bodily and sensory experiences are outlined and discussed, which is followed by an
exploration of silence, silent spaces and repetition as essential elements of both texture
and education. The discussion is exemplified by a narrative, here in the form of a
paradigmatic case, of students examining texture in the classroom. To conclude,
texture encourages or elicits attention, awareness and sensitivity, all of which are of
significance not only for (arts) education, but also for the formation of society—for the
formation of our lives.
Publisher
SMI University College of Music Education in StockholmCitation
Eva, Opstad KD. Texture and (Arts) Education -Encouraging Attention, Awareness and Sensitivity. The European Journal of Philosophy in Arts Education. 2022;7(01):7-37Metadata
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