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[ecrea] cfp: Cultural production: Diversity, equality and exclusion
Wed Apr 20 19:25:52 GMT 2016
Call for papers
*Cultural production: Diversity, equality and exclusion *
*Queen Margaret University, Edinburgh *
*Tuesday 23^rd of August 2016 9.30 am to 5.00 pm *
*Keynote speakers to include Dr Dave O’Brien from Goldsmiths, University
of London and Dr Mark Taylor from the University of Sheffield *
The dominant cultural policy narrative surrounding questions of ‘access’
and ‘inclusion’ has tended to focus on cultural consumption. Having
recognised that audiences for certain types of cultural organisation are
skewed towards the most affluent, educated and least diverse portion of
the population, numerous researchers have attempted to evaluate and
influence the manner in which this apparent inequality might be
addressed. However, research has also pointed to inequalities within the
field of cultural labour and yet far less appears to have been done with
regards to these findings. As such, it continues to be the case that
“/the voices, experiences and talents of the UK’s population as a whole
are not being expressed, represented or developed within the Cultural
and Creative Industries/” (Warwick Commission, 2015). This has social,
economic and cultural consequences, not least because patterns of
success with regards to who undertakes ‘professional’ cultural
production are inevitably linked to patterns of cultural consumption and
the associated systems of social structuring.
However, debates about inequitable access to the means of professional
cultural production have begun to gain greater prominence beyond the
plane of academia. Discussions about how some are excluded from careers
in the creative and cultural industries are increasingly focused on
questions of class, gender, ethnicity and disability. As O’Brien and
Oakley (2015) have noted “/what has long been apparent to scholars in
the field – that the cultural industries are less ethnically diverse,
more male and skewed towards those of a higher socio-economic background
than most other parts of the economy – seem[s] to have become, at least
briefly, news.”/
In August, Edinburgh plays host to the Edinburgh Festivals, collectively
one of the largest arts festivals in the world. The city is filled with
creative practitioners and many of them are hoping that the Edinburgh
festivals will offer a route into a sustainable professional career in
the arts, and are willing take significant risks as they attempt to
achieve their aspirations. The presence of such activity makes Edinburgh
in August the ideal location at which to discuss questions of inequality
in cultural production. Therefore, Queen Margaret University, Edinburgh
will host a one day colloquium to bring together academics currently
conducting research in this area, and those who are attempting to
address such inequalities in practice. As such, we are issuing a call
for papers from those whose research addresses this theme.
Should you wish to present your work at this event, please submit
abstracts of no more than *350 words, *accompanied with a short bio*,
*to (DStevenson /at/ qmu.ac.uk) <mailto:(DStevenson /at/ qmu.ac.uk)> by *19^th May
2016. *Please adhere to this date, as we intend to confirm successful
proposals by the end of May so that all contributors can arrange travel
and accommodation in good time (given the presence of the festivals,
Edinburgh is a very busy, dynamic and vibrant place in August!)
*Please feel free to circulate this message to any colleagues or
contacts you think may be interested.*
Thanks for your attention
Best
David Stevenson
Programme Leader
MA Arts, Festival and Cultural Management
School of Arts, Social Science and Management
Queen Margaret University
Edinburgh
Email: (DStevenson /at/ qmu.ac.uk) <mailto:(DStevenson /at/ qmu.ac.uk)>
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