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Arts critic Jason Farago lays out an ambitious plan showing how the new administration in the US could save the livelihoods of arts workers who have been hit hard by the pandemic.

What is art’s function? What does art do for a person, a country?

Scholars, economists, revolutionaries keep debating, but one very good answer has held now for 2,500 years. The function of art, Aristotle told us, is catharsis. You go to the theater, you listen to a symphony, you look at a painting, you watch a ballet. You laugh, you cry. You feel pity, fear. You see in others’ lives a reflection of your own. And the catharsis comes: a cleansing, a clarity, a feeling of relief and understanding that you carry with you out of the theater or the concert hall. Art, music, drama — here is a point worth recalling in a pandemic — are instruments of psychic and social health.

Not since 1945 has the United States required catharsis like it does in 2021. The coronavirus pandemic is the most universal trauma... Keep reading on The New York Times.

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