The Evolving Self (Harper Perennial Modern Classics)
Mihaly CsikszentmihalyiAfter many years of systematic research, the time came to take stock of what we had learned, and present it to a wider audience. Flow has been successful beyond expectation in reaching this aim; however, in order to complete its argument, many issues that could not be dealt with in that book still had to be explored. To do so is the aim of the present volume.
My interest in enjoyment began in 1963, when I was working on a doctoral dissertation in human development at the University of Chicago. The thesis revolved around a central issue in creativity: How do people go about thinking up new questions? How do they identify problems that no one else thought of before? To answer these questions, I resolved to observe artists at work. By taking notes and pictures of how paintings developed and then asking questions of the artists afterward as to what went on in their minds while they worked, I hoped to gain useful insights into the process of creativity.
Though my research into creativity proved successful, something even more important emerged from my observations of artists at work. What impressed me was how totally involved the artists became with what was transpiring on canvas. An almost hypnotic trance seemed to seize them as
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