Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

The Creative Dimension of Lay Thinking in the Case of the Representation of Democracy for Greek Youth

View through CrossRef
This article intends to make a contribution to the study of lay thinking on democracy and proposes a theoretical framework based on the notion of the `argumentative pole' that I have developed in my Ph.D. dissertation (Magioglou, 2005) and will be further presented in a series of articles. It focuses on the dialogical and creative dimension of lay thinking, based in a question—answer style. Argumentative poles are a number of open questions, such as `what is good?', or what is democracy?', `who should act?' and `how?', that attract different and, at times, opposing answers. The answers present a dynamic tension between an organized and an ambivalent dimension. In this article, the presentation is focused on the contradictory and ambivalent dimension of lay thinking and draws, from a theoretical point of view, on perspectives in social and cultural psychology (Bruner, 1986; Marková, 2003; Moscovici, 1976; Valsiner & Van der Veer, 2000) that attend to language and social and cultural context. This contradictory element is related to the creative character of lay thinking as a form of social thinking: bringing together ideas that do not match according to logic or ideology, which allows new combinations and new representations of democracy to appear. I present data from the narrative analysis because it led to the notion of the `argumentative pole'. The logic of the presentation is theoretical and does not follow a linear demonstrative style. It is typical of qualitative research (Flick, 2002), where the results of the data analysis inspire a `grounded' theory that fits the research questions (Strauss, 1987).
Title: The Creative Dimension of Lay Thinking in the Case of the Representation of Democracy for Greek Youth
Description:
This article intends to make a contribution to the study of lay thinking on democracy and proposes a theoretical framework based on the notion of the `argumentative pole' that I have developed in my Ph.
D.
dissertation (Magioglou, 2005) and will be further presented in a series of articles.
It focuses on the dialogical and creative dimension of lay thinking, based in a question—answer style.
Argumentative poles are a number of open questions, such as `what is good?', or what is democracy?', `who should act?' and `how?', that attract different and, at times, opposing answers.
The answers present a dynamic tension between an organized and an ambivalent dimension.
In this article, the presentation is focused on the contradictory and ambivalent dimension of lay thinking and draws, from a theoretical point of view, on perspectives in social and cultural psychology (Bruner, 1986; Marková, 2003; Moscovici, 1976; Valsiner & Van der Veer, 2000) that attend to language and social and cultural context.
This contradictory element is related to the creative character of lay thinking as a form of social thinking: bringing together ideas that do not match according to logic or ideology, which allows new combinations and new representations of democracy to appear.
I present data from the narrative analysis because it led to the notion of the `argumentative pole'.
The logic of the presentation is theoretical and does not follow a linear demonstrative style.
It is typical of qualitative research (Flick, 2002), where the results of the data analysis inspire a `grounded' theory that fits the research questions (Strauss, 1987).

Related Results

Democracy in the Political Culture of the Middle East, Asia, and Russia
Democracy in the Political Culture of the Middle East, Asia, and Russia
On September 16, 2015 theOriental Institute of the CAS organized an international conference, which addressed the question of the meanings of democracy in the Middle East, Asia, an...
Interaction as Material: The techno-somatic dimension
Interaction as Material: The techno-somatic dimension
This paper proposes an alternative approach to the analysis and design of interaction in real-time performance systems. It draws on the idea that the connection between the human e...
Slow Fire: Serial Thinking and Hardy's Genres of Induction
Slow Fire: Serial Thinking and Hardy's Genres of Induction
This essay considers the use of “serial thinking”—an approach to representation and cognition that emphasizes repetition, enumeration, and aggregation—in the work of Thomas Hardy. ...
Dimension Selection for Feature Selection and Dimension Reduction with Principal and Independent Component Analysis
Dimension Selection for Feature Selection and Dimension Reduction with Principal and Independent Component Analysis
This letter is concerned with the problem of selecting the best or most informative dimension for dimension reduction and feature extraction in high-dimensional data. The dimension...
Youth Encounters with Internet Pornography: A Survey of Youth, Caregiver, and Educator Perspectives
Youth Encounters with Internet Pornography: A Survey of Youth, Caregiver, and Educator Perspectives
AbstractDespite international inquiry regarding young people’s encounters with Internet pornography (IP), there is a lack of knowledge about how their caregivers (parents or guardi...
Effect of Video Presentation on Asian Music Perceptual Dimensions
Effect of Video Presentation on Asian Music Perceptual Dimensions
The purpose of this study was to determine the effect of video presentation on perceptual dimensions in perceiving Asian musics and on preferences for Asian musics. Asian musics co...
Abay as a linguistic-creative personality, a translator
Abay as a linguistic-creative personality, a translator
The article deals with the interpretation of the translator’s linguistic-creative personality’s nature. The relevance of the problem is due to the fact that the translator’s creati...
Iranian Youth in Times of Economic Crisis
Iranian Youth in Times of Economic Crisis
Young people play an important role in shaping Iran's politics but have only a marginal role in its economy. Youth (ages 15–29) are more than one-third of the country's population ...

Back to Top