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[ecrea] Call for papers - The Craft Economy edited volume
Mon Mar 31 06:55:47 GMT 2014
The Craft Economy edited volume
Call for papers — abstract proposals due 31 July 2014
The Craft Economy: Making, Materiality and Meaning
edited by Susan Luckman (University of South Australia) & Nicola Thomas
(University of Exeter)
A making renaissance is underway with handmade practice and goods in
global demand. Thus the central aim of The Craft Economy collection is
to bring together a comprehensive account of the current moment of
growth in the contemporary handmade marketplace. We wish to examine the
reasons why we are now seeing such significant growth, and identify the
key drivers - both in terms of production and consumption. Importantly,
we seek to locate this discussion within the larger picture of its
implications for our understandings of the contemporary cultural
economy. For example, what it may reveal about perceptions of
authenticity and practices of ethical consumption, as well as shifting
labour and production models (creative micro-enterprise; the home-based
digital cultural economy; the attraction of entrepreneurial
self-employment; and the gendering of craft work).
In the digital age, almost seventy years since the Frankfurt School
first railed against the culture industry’s commodification and
standardisation of all art, the bespoke ‘analogue’ physical item becomes
Othered, different, desirable. Handmade objects are imbrued with touch,
and therefore offer a sense of the ‘authentic’ in an ‘inauthentic’
world: they offer connection to the maker through the skill and learning
apparent in their construction, and they demonstrate the time spent on
their making in a way in most other objects cannot. Handmade cultural
goods thus need to be located within wider debates regarding ethical
consumption, makings, and ‘retro’ interest in unique physical artefacts.
In dialogue with this, the integration of digitally enabling technology
with more traditional practices of making is a key trend transforming
social and material relations between makers and consumers. Alongside
more traditional retail options such as direct and commission sales,
online distribution is changing the environment for operating a creative
micro-enterprise, offering both creative graduates and more established
designer-makers micro-entrepreneurial pathways not previously open to
them. Alternative making spaces (for example Makerspaces and FabLabs)
are transforming access to making, and the integration of digital
technologies into the making process.
Therefore we welcome proposals for papers that address any aspect of the
contemporary craft economy, especially (but certainly not limited to)
the following:
· Craft as a 21st century creative industry;
· Craft work as a model for wider cultural work practice;
· Spatialities of craft: relations of making, places of making;
· The politics of home-based production and studio/workshop
production models;
· New places of making: practices within Fablabs and Makerspaces;
· Craft apprenticeships, bench training, learning and skills
development;
· Craft education and the contemporary curriculum;
· Social inclusion/exclusion, micro-entrepreneurialism and the
contemporary craft economy;
· Vibrant materiality and craft objects and practice;
· Materiality, authenticity and the handmade;
· Craft making, flow and ‘being in the zone’;
· The ongoing resonance of binaries such as:
professional/amateur; art/craft; producer/consumer; technology/hand;
· Making and intersections with policy: regeneration through
return to making;
· Collectivisation, support organisations, guilds and
cooperative practices;
· Online identity work, self-marketing and art/craft production;
· ‘Technology’ versus ‘ handmade’ – scale, growth and the place
of tools in the making process;
· Digital making and new models of making;
· Lab cultures, community / social enterprise models;
· Craft, tourism and place-making;
· Craft co-creation and lessons for contemporary making from the
history of patronage and commissioned work;
· Craft and ethical production/consumption;
· Craft as means of economising.
Proposals: Please send proposals to both editors by 31 July 2014.
Proposal should include: title, abstract of up to 500 words,
institutional affiliation, and short biographical details for author.
Provisional acceptance will be advised by 30 September 2014.
About the editors:
Susan Luckman ((Susan.Luckman /at/ unisa.edu.au)) is Associate Professor in
Cultural Studies at the University of South Australia. Her books include
the forthcoming title Craft and the Creative Economy (Palgrave Macmillan
2015), Locating Cultural Work: The Politics and Poetics of Rural,
Regional and Remote Creativity (Palgrave Macmillan 2012), and Sonic
Synergies: Music, Identity, Technology and Community (Ashgate 2008,
co-edited with Gerry Bloustien and Margaret Peters).
Nicola Thomas ((Nicola.J.Thomas /at/ exeter.ac.uk)) is Senior Lecturer in
Cultural Geography at the University of Exeter. She works on the
cultures of the creative economy, specifically addressing the
geographies of the craft sector. Her recent AHRC funded research
includes an analysis of the enduring place of regional craft guilds,
communities of making, and relations between craft policy and practice.
Her research has been undertaken in partnership with Devon Guild of
Craftsmen, Gloucestershire Guild of Craftsmen, Crafts Council,
Craftspace, Heritage Crafts Association and Leach Pottery. Published
work includes ‘Crafting the Region: Creative Industries and Practices of
Regional Space’ (Regional Studies, 2012, with Harriet Hawkins and David
C. Harvey).
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
associate professor susan luckman
associate professor in cultural studies
school of communication, international studies and languages
university of south australia
Room C2-33A, Magill Campus
Tel: +618 8302 4152
Fax: +618 8302 4745
http://people.unisa.edu.au/Susan.Luckman
CRICOS provider # 00121B
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
associate professor susan luckman
associate professor in cultural studies
school of communication, international studies and languages
university of south australia
Room C2-33A, Magill Campus
Tel: +618 8302 4152
Fax: +618 8302 4745
http://people.unisa.edu.au/Susan.Luckman
CRICOS provider # 00121B
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