Philosophical Questions in Art Education
Why the Arts Can and Should be Taught in Schools

By (author) Dorit Barchana-Lorand

ISBN13: 9781350464605

Imprint: Bloomsbury Academic

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Format: Hardback

Published: 18/09/2025

Availability: Not yet available

Description
This book examines the rationale of incorporating the arts in the school curriculum from a philosophical, rather than pedagogical, perspective. Educational resources are frequently under scrutiny, and education policy makers wish to maximize the use of public funds and children’s time at school, leaving the arts as a lower priority. To understand the logic behind this, Lorand revisits milestones in the history of the philosophy of art to address core questions in art education, namely, what are the challenges of teaching the arts? And why teach the arts at all? Lorand draws on the work of a broad range of philosophers including Dewey, Eisner, Greene, Hume, Plato, Kant, Langer, Read and Schiller. The book aims to show how attempts to justify art as a tool for societal and individual improvement fail in advocating art education. Ultimately she claims that the arts should be taught because children have the right to receive art education. That right stems from the unique nature of art.
Series Editor’s Introduction Introduction: An Apology for Art Education 1. Curricular Exclusion of Art: Plato and Aristotle on the Dangers of Art 2. Can Art History Be Taught? Plato and Hume on Objectivity and Subjectivity in Art Education 3. The Grand Promises of Art to Society: The Ethical Justification of Schiller and Read 4. Susanne Langer’s Formalist Perspective on the Social Value of Art 5. The Cognitive Justification of Art Education: Elliot Eisner 6. The Alternative: Kant and Dewey on the Justification of Art Education from an Aesthetic Viewpoint Conclusion Bibliography Index
  • Philosophy & theory of education
  • Professional & Vocational
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List Price: £90.00