In preparation for my research paper, I have been looking for scholarly articles relating the rise of digital technologies to our perceptions of creativity and whether or not creativity has become diminished by the internet or if we simply see it as being lessened. During my search I stumbled upon the article “Creativity in Crisis?” by Lynn Helding from the Journal of Singing published May of 2011 which is a counterargument to the article “The Creativity Crisis” that appeared in Newsweek Magazine previously.
In the article, Helding distinguished between types of creativity and elaborates on the study of creativity and how it is not in crisis, but rather it is readjusting to the new technology that has come to populate the work. She hits all these points in the body of the article and successfully conveys the conclusion that if creativity is in flux, it is because of an absence of the creative mindset, not because of the internet.
Looking for this article provided an interesting challenge. Since I need to have scholarly support for my research paper, I began by looking through the ProQuest database searching specifically for scholarly articles about creativity and the internet. I had to redefine my search several times until I found this article. Before I read over it, I stopped to look up the journal and to clarify that it was in fact scholarly. The about page of the National Association of Teachers of Singing clarified that the journal is in face refereed so it qualifies as a scholarly source.