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[ecrea] The Future of Cultural Work: Call for papers
Sat Feb 13 22:45:41 GMT 2010
The Future of Cultural Work
Organisers: Mark Banks and Stephanie Taylor (CRESC, Open University)
Rosalind Gill and Andy Pratt
(Centre for Culture, Media and Creative Industries Research,
King?s College, London)
Date: Monday 7 June 2010
Venue: Open University London Regional Centre, Camden.
Call for Papers
As ?creativity? and ?creative work? have become
buzzwords for progress, so the cultural and
creative industries have become an instrumental
feature of national economic and cultural
policies. Most recently, cultural, artistic and
creative labour has been identified as leading
the transition to a more fluid, affective and
converged ?innovation? economy, where cultural
work is valued more for its ability to diffuse
ideas and ?creative energies? than for its
intrinsic value, or for its (potentially)
socially transformative or redemptive potential.
Firms, national governments, promoters of
?creative cities? and development agencies alike
have offered a plethora of interventions
designed to stimulate growth through organizing
and managing creative and cultural work (see
?Creative Britain? for example). Such a process
has rested on the assumption of a frictionless
and mutually beneficial relationship between
capital and labour, and culture and economics;
where distinctive forms of artistic and cultural
production and economic and governmental
priorities appear to co-prosper in harmonious
union. However, while the specific qualities of
cultural and creative work are now assumed to be
progressive and beneficial to both capital and
labour, recent events cast doubt on the status
of creativity as (in Andrew Ross?s words) ?the
oil of the 21st century?. The instrumental
gearing of culture to innovation policy, the
consolidation of ?free?, ?co-creative? - but
precarious, individualized and
poorly-remunerated - work in media, cultural and
arts organizations, a deep-rooted global
recession that has eviscerated opportunities for
cultural labour, and in the UK a general
election that may alter fundamentally the
creative industries script, has markedly
transformed this discursive and material field.
Here, the benign union of culture and economics,
the prospects for rewarding and meaningful
cultural industry employment, and the extent to
which creative/cultural work could or should
meet the demands of economic restructuring and
governments, come once again under scrutiny.
This conference therefore asks: What is the
status of creativity and creative work in this
new decade? What is the current and future
relationship between the creative and cultural
industries and the discursive and material practices of culture and economy?
Keynote speakers: David Hesmondhalgh, Georgina
Born, Mark Deuze, Melissa Gregg (final list TBC)
Papers are invited on the following (or similar)
topics: the conditions of creative/cultural
workers; freelancing, ?free? and co-creative
labour, cultural work and critical socio-spatial
politics; work, exclusion and marginality; the
role of creative and cultural work in economic
and cultural policy; cultural work and 'cultural
diplomacy'; impacts of technology and
?convergence?, the creative nation post-recession/post-election.
Please email abstracts (150 words max for a 20
minute paper) to
<(m.o.banks /at/ open.ac.htm)>(m.o.banks /at/ open.ac.uk) by
Friday April 9th. Places are limited and
successful acceptance will be confirmed in
mid-April. To register for the conference please
contact Karen Ho
<(k.d.ho /at/ open.ac.htm)>(k.d.ho /at/ open.ac.uk).
Conference fee: £70 (waged) £25
(Postgraduates/unwaged), includes lunch and
refreshments. See www.cresc.ac.uk
<http://www.cresc.ac.uk/> for programme updates and further details.
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Nico Carpentier (Phd)
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Vrije Universiteit Brussel - Free University of Brussels
Centre for Studies on Media and Culture (CeMeSO)
Pleinlaan 2 - B-1050 Brussels - Belgium
T: ++ 32 (0)2-629.18.56
F: ++ 32 (0)2-629.36.84
Office: 5B.401a
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European Communication Research and Education Association
Web: http://www.ecrea.eu
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E-mail: (Nico.Carpentier /at/ vub.ac.be)
Web: http://homepages.vub.ac.be/~ncarpent/
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