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[Commlist] Call for papers - A conference on failure and the cultural sector
Sat Apr 09 08:39:03 GMT 2022
Call for Papers (apologies for cross posting)
A national conference underpinned by learning from the AHRC Failspace
Project, examining how the cultural sector can better identify,
acknowledge, and learn from failure
Date: 7th of December 2022
Venue: Queen Margaret University, Edinburgh
(https://www.qmu.ac.uk/location-and-getting-here/)
Over the last 3 years the Failspace team have been examining how the
cultural sector can better identify, acknowledge, and learn from
failure. What we have found through our research is a cultural landscape
that is not conducive to honesty or critical reflection about failures;
a problem that exists not only in the cultural sector but across much of
public policy.
A lack of trust and open dialogue between participants, artists,
organisations, and funders, fuelled by a fear of losing funding, future
work, or professional reputation encourages narratives of success as a
self-defensive act of blame avoidance. But this discourages risk
taking, encourages repetition of past mistakes and results in a failure
to learn that limits significant change.
We also argue that the prevalence of these ‘feel-good’ narratives and
the tendency to overstate impacts through uncritical stories of success
risks undermining the credibility of arguments about why state subsidies
for public services, including arts and culture, are necessary.
In response, we developed a framework for talking about failure
(https://failspaceproject.co.uk/) which we hope will help to normalise
conversations about the failures that inevitably occur in cultural
projects and policies, where outright success or failure is rare. Our
framework encourages people to consider success and failure across a
range of facets, along a spectrum of degrees, over different timescales
and from the perspective of different stakeholders, with differing value
systems – for a policy or project that succeeds for one group,
community, or organisation might fail for another.
Over the course of 2022 we will be continuing to work with several
cultural organisations, funders, and artists to explore ways in which we
can embedded a commitment to talking openly about failures into the
processes and practices of the cultural sector, recognising the
potential for learning and change that such openness and honesty can
engender. This conference will reflect on that work, providing
opportunities to hear from our partner organisations and Failspace
Champions about the challenges of adopting a more honest approach to
failure and the benefits that it can bring. We hope that the conference
offers an opportunity to share learning and challenge the current
dominant narratives of success.
We hope to complement these discussions with inputs from other
academics, policymakers, and practitioners, both professional and
amateur, who have a perspective on the role and value of failure
regarding cultural policy as well as across wider public policy areas.
We see this as building upon the work published as part of a special
edition in 2020 (https://sciendo.com/issue/TJCP/7/2). We therefore
invite empirical, theoretical and practice informed contributions from
across a range of disciplines.
Topics may include, but need not be confined to, the following:
• Case studies of failure in cultural participation projects/policies
• The value and role of recognising, understanding, and learning from
failure for policymaking
• Defining and recognising failure in relation to creative practice
and/or cultural policy
• The relationship between risk and failure in relation to creative
practice and/or cultural policy
• Failures of leadership/governance in the cultural sector • Case
studies of organisational failure in the cultural sector
• The politics of failure
• The psychology of failure • The morality and ethics of failure in
policymaking • Evaluating and reporting on failures in cultural projects
and policies • The relationship between quality and failure in relation
to creative practice and/or cultural policy • Framing failures in policy
and project evaluations
• Discourses of failure and success in cultural policy
We will consider presentations, panels, and workshop-based activities.
All proposals will undergo peer review for final selection in the
conference programme. We intend for this event to happen in person
(subject to any Covid-19 related restrictions that may be in force at
the time) as such, there is not an option to present online.
How to submit a proposal
By the 17th of June 2022, please complete your proposal online at:
https://forms.office.com/r/ivH69xjCss where you will be asked to provide
us with:
• an outline or abstract of no more than 500 words describing what you
would like to present or offer the conference
• a biog of no more than 100 words for all those who would be involved
Should you have any questions about the conference, please contact
Lizzie Ridley - (pc16ewr /at/ leeds.ac.uk). The selection of paper
presentations and sessions will be announced by the end of July 2022.
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