Drama in Aesthetic Education: An Invitation to
Imagine the World as if It Could Be Otherwise
by Florence Samson
Maxine Greene, philosopher-in-residence
for the Lincoln Center Institute (LCI), suggests that through aesthetic
education "new connections are made in experience: new patterns are
formed, new vistas are opened. Persons see differently, resonate differently."
As Rilke wrote in one of his poems, and as quoted by Greene, "they
are enabled to pay heed when a work of art tells them, 'You must change
your life.'" Greene interprets Rilke's words to mean that "a
work [of art], when fully perceived and carefully attended to, makes a
demand upon beholders‹a demand that they change, look with new eyes, hear
with new ears, become something they have not been before." Greene
believes that "the perceiving, the noticing [about which Rilke spoke]
are enhanced," for in the process of "[o]pening ourselves as
perceivers to the work, entering into it kinaesthetically, we free ourselves
to grasp it in its vital fullness and complexity."
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