Tuesday, 17 January 2017

MY BELOVED TED TALKS ARE LIES? WHHHHAAAAT?




  • Frank, T. (2013, October 13). Ted talks are lying to you. Salon. Retrieved from http://www.salon.com

What is the article about?
This was a punchy, entertaining rant about how modern creativity isn't really creative at all.  Instead it is self-congratulatory crap that has been validated by experts, perhaps looking at from the perspective of a different industry, who has the managerial clout to declare it as "creative".

What I want to remember:

My take away points are best summed up in the direct quotations below of the final two paragraphs:

“Creativity: Flow and the Psychology of Discovery and Invention” (1996), in which Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi acknowledges that, far from being an act of individual inspiration, what we call creativity is simply an expression of professional consensus. Using Vincent van Gogh as an example, the author declares that the artist’s “creativity came into being when a sufficient number of art experts felt that his paintings had something important to contribute to the domain of art.” Innovation, that is, exists only when the correctly credentialed hivemind agrees that it does. And “without such a response,” the author continues, “van Gogh would have remained what he was, a disturbed man who painted strange canvases.” What determines “creativity,” in other words, is the very faction it’s supposedly rebelling against: established expertise.

"Consider, then, the narrative daisy chain that makes up the literature of creativity. It is the story of brilliant people, often in the arts or humanities, who are studied by other brilliant people, often in the sciences, finance, or marketing. The readership is made up of us — members of the professional-managerial class — each of whom harbors a powerful suspicion that he or she is pretty brilliant as well. What your correspondent realized, relaxing there in his tub one day, was that the real subject of this literature was the professional-managerial audience itself, whose members hear clear, sweet reason when they listen to NPR and think they’re in the presence of something profound when they watch some billionaire give a TED talk. And what this complacent literature purrs into their ears is that creativity is their property, their competitive advantage, their class virtue. Creativity is what they bring to the national economic effort, these books reassure them — and it’s also the benevolent doctrine under which they rightly rule the world" (Frank).

Ironically, this doesn't really offer solutions to the creativity deficit, except what to stop doing.

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