Question

Many famous biographies or novels about artists in the West stress the individual creativity of the artist (for example, James Joyce's Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man). Artists are portrayed as people who have the vision to rise above and beyond the social and cultural conditions into which they were born, sometimes even crossing the boundaries of normality as typically defined by society. How is this vision different from the concept of the artist held by many non-Western societies?

Answer

Will vary