Transmissions and Transformations: Learning through the Arts in Asia
EDITOR- Kapila Vatsyayan
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INFORMATION
- EDITOR : Kapila Vatsyayan
- HB ISBN : 978-93-80607-14-6
- Year : 2011
- Extent : x + 176
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Transmissions and Transformations
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INFORMATION
- EDITOR – Kapila Vatsyayan
- ISBN – 978-93-80607-14-6
- Year – 2011
- Extent: 400 + 40 coloured illustrations
- 10% discount + free shipping
- Usually dispatched within 3 to 5 working days.
The volume comprises papers presented at an international symposium on ‘Transmissions and Transformations: Learning through the Arts in Asia’ organized by the IIC-Asia Project. The essays, by educationists from different Asian countries, highlight the diverse as also the distinctive ways of transmitting knowledge through the arts and the crafts. The essays are a significant contribution to the recent focus on evolving alternative pedagogical tools in the formal and non-formal systems of education.
The international symposium, held in 2005, gathered on one platform people from different parts of Asia — Singapore, Malaysia, Korea, Thailand, Hong Kong, Mongolia, Kyrgyzstan, Pakistan and Australia, besides India — to explore the Asian methodologies of transmission of knowledge. The participants shared the fund of their experience on innovative projects to use the arts as a tool in the educational system for sensitizing the younger generation towards their cultural heritage. The conference stressed the need for identifying the characteristic features of the numerous strategies for transmitting information, knowledge and techniques that existed in the Asian continent, not only through the written word but also through the oral, the visual and the performative mediums.
The IIC-Asia Project was launched in 1997. In the first phase, seminars were organized, each focusing on a particular region of Asia and covering its social, economic and political dimensions. In the second phase, a thematic approach was adopted. A number of themes were thus covered: India and Asia: Aesthetic Discourses; Transmissions and Transformations: Learning through the Arts in Asia; Embroidery in Asia: Sui-Dhaga — Crossing Boundaries through Needle and Thread; and Culture of Indigo: Exploring the Asian Panorama – Plant, Product, Power. The IIC-Asia Project has also compiled an anthology of Asian Women’s Writing. Four festivals of documentary films made by Asian women filmmakers were also organized.
The Editor
Dr Kapila Vatsyayan is acknowledged nationally and internationally for her unstinting dedication to nurturing the arts and creating bridges of communication between the diverse cultural traditions of India. She has carried forward the legacy of the pioneers, principally Kamaladevi Chattopadhyaya, who gave dignity and prestige to the creativity of the traditional arts and crafts. She has taken the concerns of the inclusion of art education to international forums, specially as a member of the UNESCO Executive Board. Dr Vatsyayan has been associated with the establishment of institutions in pre-independent India and has continued to do so over half a century. In her capacity as Adviser to the Government of India, she has been responsible for the setting up of several institutions, including the Centre for Cultural Resources and Training in New Delhi, the Central Institute of Higher Tibetan Studies in Sarnath, and many others.
Dr Vatsyayan is the author of nearly 20 books and recipient of many awards, notably the Sankaradeva Award for national integration, the Rajiv Gandhi Sadbhavana Award, and the Life-time Achievement Award from the Sahitya Kala Parishad of the Government of NCT of Delhi. She is a Fellow of the Sangeet Natak Akademi and the Lalit Kala Akademi; and former Vice-Chairman of the Sangeet Natak Akademi.
Contributors
Feisal Alkazi l Richard A. Engelhardt l Lindy Joubert l Shakti Maira l Keshav Malik l Janet Pillai l Shobita Punja l Prabha Sahasrabudhe l Shanta Serbjeet Singh l Ariunaa Tserenpil l Sajida Haider Vandal l Kapila Vatsyayan l Marilyn Wilhelm l Hoseong Yong
The volume comprises papers presented at an international symposium on ‘Transmissions and Transformations: Learning through the Arts in Asia’ organized by the IIC-Asia Project. The essays, by educationists from different Asian countries, highlight the diverse as also the distinctive ways of transmitting knowledge through the arts and the crafts. The essays are a significant contribution to the recent focus on evolving alternative pedagogical tools in the formal and non-formal systems of education.
The international symposium, held in 2005, gathered on one platform people from different parts of Asia — Singapore, Malaysia, Korea, Thailand, Hong Kong, Mongolia, Kyrgyzstan, Pakistan and Australia, besides India — to explore the Asian methodologies of transmission of knowledge. The participants shared the fund of their experience on innovative projects to use the arts as a tool in the educational system for sensitizing the younger generation towards their cultural heritage. The conference stressed the need for identifying the characteristic features of the numerous strategies for transmitting information, knowledge and techniques that existed in the Asian continent, not only through the written word but also through the oral, the visual and the performative mediums.
The IIC-Asia Project was launched in 1997. In the first phase, seminars were organized, each focusing on a particular region of Asia and covering its social, economic and political dimensions. In the second phase, a thematic approach was adopted. A number of themes were thus covered: India and Asia: Aesthetic Discourses; Transmissions and Transformations: Learning through the Arts in Asia; Embroidery in Asia: Sui-Dhaga — Crossing Boundaries through Needle and Thread; and Culture of Indigo: Exploring the Asian Panorama – Plant, Product, Power. The IIC-Asia Project has also compiled an anthology of Asian Women’s Writing. Four festivals of documentary films made by Asian women filmmakers were also organized.
The Editor
Dr Kapila Vatsyayan is acknowledged nationally and internationally for her unstinting dedication to nurturing the arts and creating bridges of communication between the diverse cultural traditions of India. She has carried forward the legacy of the pioneers, principally Kamaladevi Chattopadhyaya, who gave dignity and prestige to the creativity of the traditional arts and crafts. She has taken the concerns of the inclusion of art education to international forums, specially as a member of the UNESCO Executive Board. Dr Vatsyayan has been associated with the establishment of institutions in pre-independent India and has continued to do so over half a century. In her capacity as Adviser to the Government of India, she has been responsible for the setting up of several institutions, including the Centre for Cultural Resources and Training in New Delhi, the Central Institute of Higher Tibetan Studies in Sarnath, and many others.
Dr Vatsyayan is the author of nearly 20 books and recipient of many awards, notably the Sankaradeva Award for national integration, the Rajiv Gandhi Sadbhavana Award, and the Life-time Achievement Award from the Sahitya Kala Parishad of the Government of NCT of Delhi. She is a Fellow of the Sangeet Natak Akademi and the Lalit Kala Akademi; and former Vice-Chairman of the Sangeet Natak Akademi.
Contributors
Feisal Alkazi l Richard A. Engelhardt l Lindy Joubert l Shakti Maira l Keshav Malik l Janet Pillai l Shobita Punja l Prabha Sahasrabudhe l Shanta Serbjeet Singh l Ariunaa Tserenpil l Sajida Haider Vandal l Kapila Vatsyayan l Marilyn Wilhelm l Hoseong Yong
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
Preface | vii-ix |
Arts in Education and Society Today An overview Kapila Vatsyayan | 1-15 |
Mainstreaming Arts Education in School Curriculum A socio-psychological study Prabha Sahasrabudhe | 16-49 |
Arts in Asian Education Observatories Richard A. Engelhardt | 50-64 |
Arts in Action Project A development of a framework for evaluation Lindy Joubert | 65-69 |
Inter-Ministerial Partnerships in Arts Education in Korea Hoseong Yong | 70-82 |
ARTS-ED and Heritage Education in George Town, Malaysia A case study Janet Pillai | 83-88 |
Heritage education in Lahore, Pakistan A case study Sajida Haider Vandal | 89-94 |
Promoting Arts in Education Arts Council of Mongolia Ariunaa Tserenpil | 95-100 |
Heritage Education in Jaipur, India A case study Feisal Alkazi | 101-116 |
Learning and Empowerment through Indian Classical Dance Shanta Serbjeet Singh | 117-125 |
Socio-cultural Learning through the Arts in India Shakti Maira | 126-139 |
The Irrelevance of Arts and Artists in Today’s Cultural Ethos Keshav Malik | 140-144 |
Arts Education Select non-school Indian initiatives Shobita Punja | 145-153 |
Education for the Twenty-First Century Marilyn Wilhelm | 154-165 |
Notes on Editor and Contributors | 167-168 |
Index | 169-175 |