The crisis of higher education is not unique to the arts, or even to the humanities. However, artists in particular sit at the crux of this broken system more (or perhaps just earlier) than most people in other fields, in part because the arts have the largest debt to asset ratio.
BOOK CLUB
ArticlesThe crisis of higher education is not unique to the arts. However, artists in particular sit at the crux of this broken system more than most people in other fields, in part because the arts have the largest debt to job prospect ratio.
For the first edition of BOOK CLUB we will review Ben Davis’s “9.5 Theses on Art and Class.” This sixth and final discussion covers the last two chapters in the section titled, “Conclusions.”
For the first edition of BOOK CLUB we will review Ben Davis’s “9.5 Theses on Art and Class.” This fifth discussion covers chapters eleven through fourteen in the section titled, “Art and Theory.”
For the first edition of BOOK CLUB we will review Ben Davis’s “9.5 Theses on Art and Class.” This fourth discussion covers the last two chapters in the section titled, “Art and Its Audiences.”
For the first edition of BOOK CLUB we will review Ben Davis’s “9.5 Theses on Art and Class.” This third discussion covers the first three chapters (six, seven and eight) in the section titled, “Art and Its Audiences.”
For the first edition of BOOK CLUB we will review Ben Davis’s “9.5 Theses on Art and Class.” This second discussion covers the three chapters (three, four and five) in the section titled, “Art and Politics.”
For the first edition of BOOK CLUB we will review Ben Davis’s “9.5 Theses on Art and Class.” This first discussion covers two chapters in the section titled, “Art and Class.”