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[ecrea] Gendering the creative: creative work, creative industries, creative identities - GWO 2014
Wed Sep 25 09:13:17 GMT 2013
Gender, Work & Organization 8th Biennial International Interdisciplinary
conference, 24th – 26th June, 2014
Keele University, UK
Call for abstracts
Gendering the creative: creative work, creative industries, creative
identities
Deborah Jones, Victoria University of Wellington, NEW ZEALAND
Kate Sang, Heriot Watt University, SCOTLAND
Naomi Stead, The University of Queensland, AUSTRALIA
Dimi Stoyanova, University of Warwick, ENGLAND
Rebecca Finkel, Queen Margaret University, SCOTLAND
‘Creativity’ is the engine of post-industrial ‘creative economies’. This
rhetoric encompasses not only specifically designated ‘creative
industries’ and ‘creatives’, but also a much wider idea of the
‘creative’ at work in all kinds of organisations and occupations.
Contemporary policies – national, regional, industry-driven – have set
out to extend, evaluate and monetise the creative. While some of these
government initiatives also attempt to address social diversity –
including gender - in terms of equal access to work, and of cultural
inclusion and exclusion, others do not. Ways of conceptualising
creativity may take a wide range of forms, in which both traditional and
newer are spliced together. For instance, a romantic framing of ‘arts’
and ‘artists’, based on a distinction between the creative and the
industrial, is linked with ideas of art as a vocation, and of the artist
as a distinctive kind of individualised genius. A more recent, 21st
century vision is linked with the idea of innovation as the key to
economic success, and so to workplaces specifically designed to attract
and affirm creative talent. Here the ideal ‘creative’ may be imagined as
a smoothly-functioning team of passionate and diverse talents.
The construction of gender takes varying forms in relation to the
creative. In this stream call, we are approaching both as forms of
identity intertwined in specific settings and historical contexts. The
‘creative’ is typically constructed so that women do not become the
creative stars or geniuses, do not have equal access to creative work,
are not equally rewarded, and are subject to various forms of
occupational segregation that reinforce these inequalities in both
recognition and reward. Processes of gendering the creative are inherent
in theories and representations of creativity itself and its relation to
the masculine and feminine, and in the industrial, occupation and
creative community practices whereby gender influences who has access to
which work, and to recognition as creatively successful. Intersecting
with gender are constructions of class, race, age and sexuality that
complicate and extend privilege and inequality.
In response to the emergence of policy-driven frameworks for mapping the
‘creative economy’, creative work has increasingly been recognised as
‘work’, collapsing creative subjects – artists, technicians,
entrepreneurs – into data sets where earnings and occupations can be
surveyed. In oppositional mode, critical scholars have increasingly paid
attention to forms of creative work, or ‘cultural labour’ as aspects of
the labour process, and raised questions about the forms of exploitation
with which it is associated. Debates about creative work seek to frame
it in relation to other kinds of exploitative or precarious work, while
maintaining a focus on distinctive features of the ‘creative’. In
particular, such research recognises that creative work is not only a
type of work of developing economic and political importance, but that
struggles over the creative are also struggles over the control of
cultural production. However people working in many creative fields
often refuse or ignore such analyses, rejecting the notion of creativity
as a job. Identifying in various ways as artists with a vocation, they
often work in what they see as non-creative jobs, perhaps part-time or
intermittent, to fund their creative practice. The distinctions between
paid and unpaid work is blurred, and unpaid positions such as
‘internships’ may be institutionalised as a way to get a foot in the
door of a creative industry. Or, even if in paid creative work, they may
accept low pay, extremely demanding working conditions, and precarious
employment. Such patterns are also seen within established professions
such as architecture where members often reflect on architecture as a
‘lifestyle’ rather than as a job or career. The language of workplace
rights is frequently marginalised or silenced altogether, and forms of
collective organising such as unionisation are often unavailable or
rejected. In such a context, it is very difficult for women to find a
forum or space to raise issues of creative work and gender equality,
such as pay, status, recognition, or acknowledgment of family
responsibilities.
For this stream, we invite empirical, theoretical or methodological
papers that explore the ways that creative work is gendered. The
gendered construction of ‘creativity’ can be seen in analyses of women’s
employment within creative industries, and of ways that creativity is
imagined or represented in a range of occupations and practices.
Although the stream is open to any discussion of gender and creativity
or creative work, we particularly welcome explorations of specific
employment settings or contexts, for example, architecture, film and
television, comedy, literature (including poetry) and design. We also
call for speculative papers which propose innovative theoretical or
methodological perspectives that can further open up studies of how the
creative is gendered. We encourage writers to specify their own local
contexts in which various versions of gender and creativity play out. We
also encourage an interdisciplinary approach, acknowledging that the
literatures of work in the creative industries, like the sector itself,
have developed in and across a range of disciplines, including cultural
studies, sociology and geography, as well as organisational studies. The
following list is indicative, although not exhaustive, of likely topics
in the stream:
· Distinctive forms of gendering the creative in different
creative sectors: How is gender distinctively constructed in different
creative sectors? What are the traditions and organising processes that
enable or constrain women in different ways? How are roles within a
given sector gendered in terms of status and specific skills? Are there
government policies that set goals for gender participation and measure
the workforce accordingly?
· Exceptionalist discourses: How do some creative professions
frame themselves as unlike any other profession, as entirely unique and
incomparable? What are the gendered consequences of this framing? How
does this exceptionalism deflect critique?
· Embodying the creative: How is creativity is embodied as
gendered? How is creativity performed through dress and demeanour,
bodily comportment, and body art such as tattoos, as markers of
belonging to a ‘creative’ sub-culture, of creativity and hipsterism.
This question could be addressed by visual methodologies, and other
interdisciplinary approaches such s fashion studies and the sociology of
clothing.
· Theorising creativity as gendered: How is the subject of the
artist/ creative gendered? How does the (female) muse relate to the
(male) genius? How are inspiration, aspiration and the sources of
creative ideas gendered?
· Methodologies for studying gendered creativity: How can we
explore innovative methods for studying and understanding the creative
industries and creative labour? What methods are most appropriate, for
example, visual, aesthetic, ethnographic?
· Claiming the creative: How are ‘creative’ identities allocated
and recognised? How is the ‘super-creative core’ constituted in relation
to the ‘below the line’ people, i.e. the ‘crew’, support workers, and
administrators? What systems are there of awards, grants, training, and
networks and how are they gendered? Who are the gatekeepers to these
resources and who receives them? Who in a profession or occupation
actually gets to be creative at all, and why?
· Authorship, attribution and credit in collaborative work: What
are the gendered implications and effects of these practices? What is
the effect of publications, awards and organisations insisting on a
single creative figurehead?
· Intersectionality: How does gender intersect with class,
ethnicity, disability, and sexual orientation for those working in the
sector? When and how does ‘diversity’ signal ‘creative difference’ as
opposed to marginalisation?
· Against management: What are the gendered effects of
tendencies in creative professions to actually and actively resist
management and perceived managerialism, including any kind of equity
initiatives? How is the rhetoric of egalitarian sociality exploited to
foreclose questions of personal patronage and uneven access to resources?
· The creative profession as cult: What are the gendered effects
of some creative industries scenarios of intensive work where your
colleagues become your only friends, your romantic and business
partners, and your family?
· Creativity and vocation: What are the effects of the ‘calling’
to the creative professions? How does gender intersect with vocation to
intensify sacrifice on the part of women in terms of pay, conditions,
status?
· Imagining and organising gender equality in creative work:
What would decent work in the creative sector look like for women? How
do women organise in guilds, professional groups, unions or lobby groups
to raise issues of gender equality in this sector? How do women organise
creative projects with men or other women that open up new opportunities
for women to lead, collaborate and develop skills in spaces of great
equality?
Abstracts of approximately 500 words (ONE page, Word document NOT PDF,
single spaced, excluding references, no header, footers or track
changes) are invited by 1st November 2013 with decisions on acceptance
to be made by stream leaders within one month. All abstracts will be
peer reviewed. New and young scholars with 'work in progress' papers are
welcomed. Papers can be theoretical or theoretically informed empirical
work. In the case of co-authored papers, ONE person should be identified
as the corresponding author. Due to restrictions of space on the
conference schedule, multiple submissions by the same author will not be
timetabled. Abstracts should be emailed to: Kate Sang (k.sang /at/ hw.ac.uk)
Abstracts should include FULL contact details, including your name,
department, institutional affiliation, mailing address, and e-mail
address. State the title of the stream to which you are submitting your
abstract. Note that no funding, fee waiver, travel or other bursaries
are offered for attendance at GWO2014.
For more information about the conference, including venue,
accommodation and registration, see the GWO2014 Call for Abstracts -
All Streams on the Gender, Work & Organization site,
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1468-0432
Deborah Jones, School of Management, Victoria University of Wellington,
P.O. Box 600, Wellington, NEW ZEALAND
Te Whare Wananga o te Upoko o te Ika a Maui, Pouaka Poutapeta 600, Te
Whanganui-a-Tara, AOTEAROA
RH930, Rutherford House, Bunny Street, Wellington 64-4-463-5731
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