Spencer Greenberg speaks with Georgia Shreve about positive psychology, multi-disciplinary practice and education and creativity. "I literally have a passion for three different fields: visual, for musical and for verbal," she says. She often writes the whole libretto of an extended piece that's going to be performed - including video behind it. For instance, I'm doing this piece in the Byzantine era. So I'm going to use a lot of motifs from the Byzantine world."
Read the full transcript here.
What is positive psychology? What is the PERMA model? From a creativity standpoint, is there a connection between music and writing? In various artistic fields, how hard is it to be creative without first achieving some level of technical mastery? How can one hone the skill of creativity? How useful is optimism for achieving happiness? What are the different sources from which humans derive pleasure? To what extent is western culture conscious of ageism? What does positive psychology have to say about interpersonal relationships? What is the value and purpose of extended education generally and degrees specifically? What is wisdom?
Georgia Shreve is a composer, fiction writer, playwright, and poet. She holds degrees from Stanford, Brown, Columbia, and PENN. Her poetry and fiction have been published in magazines such as the New Yorker, New Republic, and New Criterion, and her short story, "The Countess of M-", won the Stanford Magazine Fiction award.
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