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in the theater of One World
a media project | instinctively in touch with everything global and worthwhile

Press release | Interest in arts predict social responsibility and altruism, Chicago university study reports

Posted on August 20, 2012

3


CHICAGO |  If you sing, dance, draw, or act — and especially if you watch others do so — you probably have an altruistic streak, according to a study by researchers at the University of Illinois at Chicago.

People with an active interest in the arts contribute more to society than those with little or no such interest, the researchers found. They analyzed arts exposure, defined as attendance at museums and dance, music, opera and theater events; and arts expression, defined as making or performing art.

“Even after controlling for age, race and education, we found that participation in the arts, especially as audience, predicted civic engagement, tolerance and altruism,” said Kelly LeRoux, assistant professor of public administration at UIC and principal investigator on the study.

In contrast to earlier studies, Generation X respondents were found to be more civically engaged than older people.

LeRoux’s data came from the General Social Survey, conducted since 1972 by the National Data Program for the Sciences, known by its original initials, NORC. A national sample of 2,765 randomly selected adults participated.

“We correlated survey responses to arts-related questions to responses on altruistic actions — like donating blood, donating money, giving directions, or doing favors for a neighbor — that place the interests of others over the interests of self,” LeRoux said. “We looked at ‘norms of civility.’ Previous studies have established norms for volunteering and being active in organizations.”

The researchers measured participation in neighborhood associations, church and religious organizations, civic and fraternal organizations, sports groups, charitable organizations, political parties, professional associations and trade unions. They measured social tolerance by two variables:

  • Gender-orientation tolerance, measured by whether respondents would agree to having gay persons speak in their community or teach in public schools, and whether they would oppose having homosexually themed books in the library.
  • Racial tolerance, measured by responses regarding various racial and ethnic groups, including African-Americans, Hispanics, and Asian Americans. Eighty percent of the study respondents were Caucasian, LeRoux said.

The researchers measured altruistic behavior by whether respondents said they had allowed a stranger to go ahead of them in line, carried a stranger’s belongings, donated blood, given directions to a stranger, lent someone an item of value, returned money to a cashier who had given too much change, or looked after a neighbor’s pets, plants or mail.

“If policymakers are concerned about a decline in community life, the arts shouldn’t be disregarded as a means to promote an active citizenry,” LeRoux said. “Our positive findings could strengthen the case for government support for the arts.”

The study was based on data from 2002, the most recent year in which the General Social Survey covered arts participation. LeRoux plans to repeat the study with results from the 2012 survey, which will include arts data.

The UIC research was part of a nationwide effort funded by the National Endowment for the Arts to learn how individuals’ exposure to the arts affects American society. Fifteen institutions across the country designed and conducted various studies.
For more information about UIC, visit www.uic.edu.

University of Illinois at Chicago East Campus ...

Related articles
  • Interested in the arts? (southofheaven.typepad.com)
  • Interest in arts predicts social responsibility (sciencedaily.com)
  • Interested in the Arts? You’re Probably More Altruistic. (bigthink.com)
  • Brain Anatomy Predicts Altruistic Behavior (futurepundit.com)
  • Wealthy London Neighborhoods May Be ‘More Altruistic’ Suggests Lost Letter Experiment (medicalnewstoday.com)
  • Arts interest => Social Responsibility (improvinsights.com)
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Tagged: Altruism, Chicago, Civic engagement, General Social Survey, LeRoux, Research, University of Illinois, University of Illinois-Chicago
Posted in: Art & Politics, Breaking News, Press Release
← Performance review | Diverse City Theater’s nervy revival of Lee Blessing’s “Two Rooms” gives voice to voiceless
Deadlines | MAP Fund offers funding for contemporary arts performance projects, Oct. 17 deadline →
3 Responses “Press release | Interest in arts predict social responsibility and altruism, Chicago university study reports” →
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by randy gener

randy gener pictured at columbus circle in manhattan

“From the Edge: Performance Design in the Divided States of America” at LaMaMa La Galleria

From the Edge: Performance Design in the Divided States of America

Reflections on curating and creating national expositions in an international art-based mega-exhibition in Prague
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  • Curatorial essay: "Exhibiting a country on the edge: a U.S. approach to performance design"
  • USA exposition returns from Prague: "American performing garage under the sign of Obama"
  • Prague diaries: "Philadelphia theater-makers talk about how performance design affected their works and processes."
  • Interview with curators: "Curators speak about the thrills, challenges and obstacles of staging national expositions of design."
  • -

    “From the Edge: Performance Design in the Divided States of America,” the USA national pavilion at Prague National Gallery

    On Smart Power, International Cultural Exchange and Performance Design | An Interview by Amanda White Thietje

    Interview by AMANDA WHITE THIETJE:
    -
    RANDY GENER and I met in Prague this summer, where we were both attending the 2011 Prague Quadrennial of Performance Design and Space (PQ). I was wandering through the exhibits, soaking up the inspiration and the beauty of the city; he was serving as both curatorial advisor of "From the Edge" (USITT’s USA National Pavilion) and Editor-In-Chief of this year’s PQ daily newspaper.
    -
    Randy agreed to talk with me about the PQ, and there’s so much in this interview I want to share with you that I’m going to post it in three parts. Click on the titles of each article below so you can read each part of the interview:
    -

  • Interview – Part 1: "From the Edge"
  • Interview – Part 2: "Active Searching & The Value of the Prague Quadrennial"
  • Interview – Part 3: "A Ripple Effect."
  • -

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    Categories

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    Press Quotes and Commendations

    >> "A first-rate writer and editor. Randy Gener understands culture in the widest sense: as news, as art, as politics, as media," Margo Jefferson, Pulitzer Prize–winning writer.
    -
    >> "Mr. Randy Gener’s 'in the theater of One World,' a showcase of his own individual work, is taking up the slack that print journalism is leaving behind. You won’t find this in your local papers," Superfluities Redux.
    -
    >> "The visionary," Instinct Magazine.
    -
    >> "An internationalist, a champion of cultural exchange and dialogue," The New York Daily News.
    -
    >> "Randy Gener's command of theatrical subjects is unequalled among his contemporaries," American Theatre magazine/Theatre Communications Group.
    -
    >> "Randy Gener sheds light into censorship and repression of the arts," Judges of the Deadline Club Award, New York chapter of Society of Professional Journalists.
    -
    >> "Randy Gener is one of the most compelling voices of our era of globalization," Ioana Ieronim, author, poet and Fulbright Program Director of Fulbright Commission Romania.
    -
    >> "Gener draws our attention to largely ignored voices and visions on the international theatrical scene," Judges of the George Jean Nathan Award for Dramatic Criticism.
    -
    >> "Mr. Gener holds himself to a high standard in his long-form journalism — perhaps a model for young journalists," Superfluities Redux.
    -
    >> "Gener’s writing on theater, especially as it interacts with LGBT lives, is beautifully done, knowledgeable and almost lyrical in its language,” Judges of NLGJA Journalist of the Year.
    -
    >> "Randy Gener demonstrates the ripple effect that spotlighting artistic passion can have," Judges of the Deadline Club Award, New York chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists.
    -
    >> "Randy Gener's 'Love Seats for Virginia Woolf' is a meditative homage. Gener has staged his play with a subtle grace that complements the art objects' sedentary ingenuity. Never has Virginia's room of one's own been so suggestively furnished,” The Village Voice
    -
    >> "Gener's accumulation of words in his play 'Love Seats for Virginia Woolf' are the feathery evanescence of the butterfly's wings clamped together with the bolts of iron that are the four loveseat sculptures. The actors become words personified. I was left astonished,” The Virginia Woolf Miscellany of the International Virginia Woolf Society.
    -
    >> "His essays wed critical intelligence with a love of the telling and unruly fact," Judges of George Jean Nathan Award for Dramatic Criticism.
    -
    >> "Gener went above and beyond with regard to enterprise, resourcefulness and overcoming of obstacles in the pursuit of the story," Judges of Deadline Club Award, New York chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists.
    -
    >> "Randy Gener has been a tremendous asset to American Theatre ever since he was selected as a Jerome Foundation Affiliated Writer back in 1995-96, and especially since he joined the staff full-time in 2001," American Theatre magazine/Theatre Communications Group.
    -
    >> "One of the leaders of the Asian American community," The New York Daily News.
    -
    >> "In conferring the Pamana ng Pilipino (Legacy of the Filipino Nation) Presidential Award to Randy Gener, the President recognizes Gener's excellence in the field of theater arts and creativity, and diligence in promoting Filipino-American interests and accomplishments to mainstream audiences in Europe and the United States of America," His Excellency Benigno Simeon Aquino III, President of the Republic of the Philippines.
    -

    Biography

    Randy Gener is the Nathan Award-winning editor, writer, critic, curator, playwright and visual artist in New York City.
    -
    His conceptual installation, "in the garden of One World," debuted at La MaMa La Galleria in New York. He is the author of "Love Seats for Virginia Woolf," and other plays.
    -
    For his editorial work and critical essays as the senior editor of American Theatre magazine, Gener has received the George Jean Nathan Award for Dramatic Criticism, the highest accolade for excellence in dramatic criticism in the United States; the Deadline Club Award for Best Arts Reporting from the New York chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists; five media awards for excellence in travel-writing from the annual North American Travel Journalists Association Awards competition; and the NLGJA Journalist of the Year 2010.

    Tweets:

    • My essay IN SEARCH OF CRITICISM WITHOUT BORDERS in Critical Stages : The IATC Webjournal shar.es/Zk3Kl via @sharethis 10 hours ago
    • Cannes: Damon, Soderbergh on the Bared Souls and Butts in Behind the Candelabra vult.re/13IZ9WC @vulture 11 hours ago
    • John Kay - A good economist knows the true value of the arts johnkay.com/2010/08/11/a-g… 12 hours ago
    • "NOLI" OPERA NEWS | Investors and advocates pledge their support for NYC production randygenerlive.blogspot.com/2013/05/noli-o… 22 hours ago
    • Francois Sagat Opens Up On Gay Porn Suicides And Why He Quit The Business queerty.com/francois-sagat… via @queerty 1 day ago
    • "NOLI" OPERA NEWS | Investors and advocates pledge their support for NYC production nblo.gs/Lr3Nl 1 day ago
    • David Byrne took home Obie Award w/ Fat Boy Slim for HERE LIES LOVE Congrats @PublicTheaterNY Cyndi Lauper presented http://t.co/3igMwhi84L 1 day ago
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    • I'm attending National Design Portfolio Review- 2013 conta.cc/Z9lDOq #constantcontact 2 days ago
    • 2 more books for USC Press publications shar.es/ZjKrc via @inquirerdotnet 2 days ago
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