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Like a House on Fire: Renewal of the Arts in a Postmodern Culture
 
 
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Like a House on Fire: Renewal of the Arts in a Postmodern Culture (Paperback)

by Steve Scott (Author)
Key Phrases: postmodernist thinkers, Old Testament, New York, John's Gospel (more...)
5.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (1 customer review)


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Editorial Reviews

Review
After observing the tremendous progress of Christians in the arts over the last 20 years, I still find many paralyzed in their thinking about, and practice of, creativity. British author, musician, and artist Steve Scott has been an experimenter in the Christian arts scene for almost three decades and, utilizing his experiences of Christian art in Russia and Indonesia, sets out in this collection of integrated essays to investigate the role of the Christian artist in the multicultural, postmodern world. Scott provides a clear and concise survey of the development of Western thought and religion to indicate the historical conditions of the modern predicaments of cultural, ethical, and epistemological relativism, artistic formalism and modernism, and the loss of foundations and tradition in postmodernity. Persuasively arguing that modern art has failed to confront the realms of culture and society, Like a House on Fire claims that contemporary Christian art must transcend ethnocentric interpretations of the Bible by employing the modes of communication practiced by Jesus, such as parable, metaphor, and image. Like Tolstoy in What is Art? Scott assumes the universality of Christian doctrine and the gospels in his attacks on contemporary art. While the reader is left wondering what specific works of art fall into the category of bad Christian art, Scott provides some wonderful examples of Biblical interpretation to demonstrate that Christian art must be attuned to context and content as well as form, style, and technique. -- From Independent Publisher

Product Description
Over the centuries, the work of painters, poets, and performers has often been the harbinger or catalyst of change, or perhaps only a reflection of the surrounding culture. Steve Scott believes the arts working within the context of the church can help us through the uncertain transition to the future. Cherished ideologies, philosophies, and modes of expression are being destroyed--yet out of this destruction comes the possibility for renewal of our cultures and lives.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 135 pages
  • Publisher: Cornerstone Press Chicago (July 1997)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0940895374
  • ISBN-13: 978-0940895379
  • Product Dimensions: 10 x 5.5 x 0.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 8 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #3,252,443 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Walking on Water Wasn't Built in a Day, June 25, 2005
Anyone who's heard Steve Scott's brilliant new wave record/ CD, Love in the Western World, will notice that I named this review after a song on that album. Steve also often names his pieces after his songs or vice versa, which is the first thing that makes this book great; the interconnectedness of all things Steve Scott, for whom life and art and faith are not disconnected pursuits. This book, like his music, like his poetry yells that they don't have to be. If that isn't good news for the artist, I don't know what is.

This book sort of picks up where Crying for a Vision (Stride Books, England) left off, but really both books are a jumble of essays loosely organized around a common theme, and not very "booky" at all. Having said that, House will still be over many reader's heads, and they'll naturally be tempted to put it down. I don't advise that: instead jump around. Skip the way deep histories in the first two chapters and dive in later. "A Jar of Dead Flies" ran in some version in now defunct True Tunes magazine. Part of "Am I Really Here or Is it Just Art?" appeared in HM magazine (just celebrating 20 years--see my magazine guide to get it from Amazon), which is to say they really are independent essays.

"Am I Really Here" relates to Scott's poetry over tape loops album, The Butterfly Effect, which it would be very cool to read and then listen to respectively in an arts/ reading group. House is full of bits like that (the last two essays are projects) that could be discussed over a cup of joe (or a pint of Guiness), with each member of the group bringing examples from their own or other's art (it would really open up the part on post-modernism to thrash it out in a group).

Christianity Today had an article on how traditionally Catholic and various stripes of Protestant colleges are regaining their original vision, which sort of means that how they reinvent themselves is up for grabs. I can't even imagine what might happen if someone used House as a textbook. Imagine reading a book about art by someone who actually made art. Steve Scott's now and then chapbooks, The Boundaries, are being collected into one volume by Stride, and Crying for a Vision is due to be reprinted.

Steve's CDs are also (sometimes) available through RadRockers.com (search under Scott). The 77s were his back up band on Love in the Western World, which RadRockers called " a deliciously creepy, way before its time alternative rock classic, with similarities to David Bowie, Roxy Music and the Police...Lyrically deep and brilliant, with vocal inflections similar to Lou Reed." His other rock collections are Magnificent Obsession and Lost Horizon. His other albums are more experimental, like The Butterfly Effect, or Crossing the Boundaries, which was part of an installation with visual painter Gaylen Stewart, Empty Orchestra (the literal meaning of Karaoke), and More Than a Dream (odd reversions of Scott rock songs). So for an art book by an artist, check out Steve Scott.
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