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Work Photographer's corner Friday flashback
A conversation with Lewis Hyde

Lewis Hyde (left) and Scott Russell Sanders

When Lewis Hyde’s Trickster Makes This World: Mischief, Myth and Art was published, Margaret Atwood referred to the book as a “masterpiece of wondering; of pertinent story-telling; of pondering.” Join Hyde and author Scott Russell Sanders, IU Distinguished Professor of English, for an engaging exchange on the art, craft and wonder of story-telling as well as the "cultural commons" we inhabit. Hyde was a visitor to the IU Bloomington campus in February as part of the annual celebration of Arts Week.

Listen to the entire conversation or listen by topic:

Why should we value the qualities of the trickster character?

• What do you mean by saying that the trickster myth is "the story of intelligence arising from appetite?"

• Why is imagination so important for the flourishing of culture?

• What inspired you to write a book about works of art as gifts rather than commodities?
How did your own writing of poetry influence your thinking about art as a gift?


• You are working on a new book about what you call the "cultural commons." What do you mean by that phrase?
How does your new book develop the concerns you've examined in the previous ones?


• What are some examples of creativity that you will be addressing in your new book?

• How have American attitudes toward ideas and inventions changed since the founding of our country?

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