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[Commlist] International postgraduate workshop on creative labour in East Asia and Beyond
Wed Jan 16 14:38:49 GMT 2019
Call for Papers
International postgraduate workshop on creative labour in East Asia and
Beyond: work, subjectivity and alternatives in the global creative economies
Dates: 16 - 18 May 2019
Place: Beijing Normal University, Beijing, China
Convenors
Jeroen de Kloet (University of Amsterdam)
Anthony Fung (Beijing Normal University)
Yiu Fai Chow (Hong Kong Baptist University)
Jian Lin (University of Amsterdam)
We invite abstract submissions from post-graduate and Ph.D researchers
to a workshop on creative labour in East Asia.
Generally all human labour is potentially embodied with creativity
(McGuigan 2010: 324). In the past two decades, however, the circulation
of capital has delimited creativity as a definitive feature that
distinguishes certain occupations in the so-called creative industries.
Policy makers around the globe, following the 1990’s British government,
embrace the ‘creative industries’ discourse and trumpet creative work
for its bohemian spirit, autonomy and playfulness. Nevertheless,
critiques have noted that the real situation of creative work is not as
autonomous, self-expressive and fulfilling as imagined
by creative-industry policies. Creative workers have become a creative
precariat, suffering under precarious working conditions and surrounded
by problems such as short-term contracts, unequal earnings and a lack of
unions (Curtin and Sanson, 2016; Hesmondhalgh and Baker, 2011).
Discourses surrounding creativity function as elements connected by the
‘creativity dispositif’, to implement job creation while also to
discipline youthful population – to be creative (McRobbie 2016; Reckwitz
2017).
Most of these claims are elaborated from the perspective of western,
‘neoliberal’ creative industries. The critical language used often
directs all discussion of ‘inequality’, ‘precarity’ and
‘self-exploitation’ of creative labour towards a critique of
‘neoliberalism’, thus running the risk of overlooking different
socio-political contexts. The global hierarchy of creative industries
and the national political atmosphere often affect the condition of
creative labour and make the discourse of creativity function
in different ways (Fung, 2016; Lin 2019). For example, in the case of
China, culture and creativity are not only touted for ‘restructuring
economy’, but also designated as instrument for wielding ‘soft power’
and maintaining social stability (Keane 2010).
· How does the creativity dispositif function differently across
different geo-political contexts, such as in East Asia?
· Instead of grouping all the creative labourers as ‘precariat’,
how do creative practitioners from different social, political contexts
experience precarity differently?
· How do these distinctive social contexts also result in different
modes of governance and subjectification?
· Where and how can we look for ‘alternatives’ – when we take the
issue of contextuality into account, how can we conceive ‘good cultural
work’ and to make creative labour ‘good work’ (Hesmondhalgh and Baker,
2011)?
To bring the global perspective to the study of creative production and
creative labour, this workshop invites scholars from both global and
regional (East Asian) contexts to engage with the above questions on the
labour issues in contemporary cultural production, and to reflect upon
the possibilities for good work and alternative creative economies
brought by the interaction between the global capitalism and the local
geopolitical economy.
Abstracts (max. 300 words) and short biographical notes (max. 100 words)
need to be submitted to (j.lin2 /at/ uva.nl)
<mailto:(j.lin2 /at/ uva.nl)> by 7 February 2019. Accepted participants will be
notified by 1 March 2019. Workshop participation is free of charge and
we will cover the flight and accommodation expenses for selected speakers.
A selection of workshop papers will be published as special issue in a
peer-reviewed journal.
The workshop is part of the
ChinaCreative project (http://chinacreative.humanities.uva.nl) that is
funded by a consolidator grant from the European Research Council. It is
co-organized by the University of Amsterdam, Beijing Normal University
and Hong Kong Baptist University.
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