Free Expression, Public Support, and Censorship: Examining Government's Role in the Arts in Canada and the United StatesMichael Margolis University Press of America, 1994 - 145 pages In this work, Canadian and American scholars, critics, government officials, and arts presenters discuss varied aspects of the role of government in the arts. The first section addresses general questions of government involvement in the arts in Canada and the U.S., and also presents a comparison of North American arts policy with governmental policy toward the arts in Western Europe. The second section examines government policies toward arts education and cultural exchange in Canada and the U.S. The final section examines the tensions that arise concerning free expression and censorship when the governments of Canada and the U.S. allocate funds to support particular artists, programs, or projects. |
Contents
Arts Policy and Politics | 13 |
What Ought To Be The Role of Government VisAVis the Arts? | 37 |
Arts Education Policy and Cultural Exchange | 45 |
Copyright | |
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abortion AISBEG Amendment American artistic expression artists and arts Arts and Humanities arts community arts councils arts education arts funding arts in Canada arts literacy arts literate arts organizations arts policy arts program audience Bella Lewitzky brave new world budget Canada Council Congress Congressional constitutional controversial Court creative cultural dance decision democracy discussion distributive policy ernment established Faaborg family planning federal arts federal funding free expression Getty Center global Globe and Mail government funding governmental grants groups impact involved issue network John Brademas John Frohnmayer Kokinda legislation limited major National Endowment obscene orthodoxy participants political pornography prior restraint prohibit projects public funds Public Policy regulation regulatory Rehnquist restrictions role Rust social society speech strict scrutiny subgovernment subsidy Sullivan theater tion unconstitutional conditions United University University of Cincinnati viewpoint visas Walter Pitman Wyszomirski