Sorting Out Our Roles: The State Arts Agencies and the National Endowment for the Arts

1991 ◽  
Vol 21 (3) ◽  
pp. 215-226 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeffrey Love
Author(s):  
Jan Van Dyke

A variety of data show that men now lead the concert dance field in the United States. Not only do they receive jobs as performers and choreographers out of proportion to their representation as dance students, they also more readily achieve acclaim and financial security. Men stand out among dance artists because there is a paucity of them, giving them a professional advantage. This chapter examines funding at the state and national level, including Guggenheim Fellowships, MacArthur Grants, and National Endowment for the Arts Fellowships to see to whom funding goes. Various awards are also scrutinized for gender equity, including the Dance Magazine Award, Capezio Dance Award, Kennedy Center Honors Award, and the National Medal of the Arts. In addition, teaching and choreographing opportunities for men and women are compared.


1985 ◽  
Vol 7 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 10-11
Author(s):  
Deborah Bowman

From 1980 to 1983, I served as the Folklife in Education Coordinator for the Ohio Arts Council. The program is an outgrowth of a collaboration between the Folk Arts and the Artists in Education programs, which the National Endowment for the Arts designed to incorporate folk arts and artists into AIE's Artists-in-Residence program. By 1980 twenty-seven states offered some kind of school or community program where folk artists spent a period of days or weeks working with students of all ages. These programs are increasingly popular. Most states now offer residency programs, curriculum materials, and other opportunities for bringing students into closer communion with the folk traditions of their culture or geographic area through state arts agencies, folklife programs or Parks and Recreation departments.


PMLA ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 132 (3) ◽  
pp. 659-667 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lisa Marie Rhody

The challenge facing “distant reading” has less to do with Franco Moretti's assertion that we must learn “how not to read” than with his implication that looking should take the place of reading. Not reading is the dirty open secret of all literary critics-there will always be that book (or those books) that you should have read, have not read, and probably won't read. Moretti is not endorsing a disinterest in reading either, like that reported in the 2004 National Endowment for the Arts' Reading at Risk, which notes that less than half the adult public in the United States read a work of literature in 2002 (3). In his “little pact with the devil” that substitutes patterns of devices, themes, tropes, styles, and parts of speech for thousands or millions of texts at a time, the devil is the image: trees, networks, and maps-spatial rather than verbal forms representing a textual corpus that disappears from view. In what follows, I consider Distant Reading as participating in the ut pictura poesis tradition-that is, the Western tradition of viewing poetry and painting as sister arts-to explain how ingrained our resistances are to Moretti's formalist approach. I turn to more recent interart examples to suggest interpretive alternatives to formalism for distant-reading methods.


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