Archive for calls, February 2025

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[Commlist] CFP: What forms of creativity does the University system really permit? RGS-IBG 2025

Fri Feb 28 18:01:16 GMT 2025




2nd Call for papers RGS-IBG AC2025, University of Birmingham (26-29 August 2025)

DEADLINE FOR ABSTRACTS: Tuesday 4th March 2025 (with apologies for late circulation)

Session Title: What forms of creativity does the University system really permit?

Session convenors: Simon Moreton (UWE Bristol) and Liz Roberts (UWE Bristol)

This session contends that there is much to be celebrated in creative geographies and geographies of creativity, but that researchers should be attendant to and wherever possible resist the triumphalist policy rhetoric of ‘creativity’ and give specific attention to the nuances, limits and challenges of creativity in and beyond the university context. The emergence of ‘creativity’ as a central driver in Western societies has been a complicated and multivalent phenomenon. It has happened partly as a consequence of specific strategies driven by the belief that innovations in knowledge production and exploitation are key to post-industrial economic growth, but also through the production of a broader socio-economic imaginary that encompasses (but is not limited to) logics of placemaking and urban redevelopment led by cultural activities, the co-option of often transgressive cultural practices into the commercial mainstream, the elision of social and economic policy, and the rise of ‘creative’ lifestyles and subjectivities, all under the assertion that creativity can solve both social and economic crises simultaneously (Mould 2018). Creativity has consequently become part of a regulatory and rationalising grammar reconfiguring subjectivities and practices of contemporary life, changing and structuring ‘the world it assumes to explain’ (Dzudzek and Lindner, 2015 p. 2; also Bill 2016, Osborne 2003). In universities, creativity has ‘come into focus as an object of university governance which extends to staff, students, its civic duty to regional populations, and its contribution to the national economy’ (Bill (2016 p. 61; Moreton 2021). One expression of this is the significant investment (£276m thus far) made by the UK government since 2012 in programmes that give universities responsibility to deliver economic development in the creative sector through R&D and knowledge exchange (Moreton 2016). Flagship university-creative economy programmes, funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) and Innovate UK, include Knowledge Economy Hubs for the Creative Economy (2012-2016), the Creative Industries Clusters Programme (CICP, 2018-2024), Convergent Screen Technologies and Performance in Realtime (CoSTAR 2023-2029) and XRtists (2024-2027). This funding has emerged alongside a strategic devaluing and defunding of the arts and humanities in higher education, and an increase in calculative practices around ‘impact’, student employability, earnings, and ‘value for money’. This further instantiates creativity as an instrumental tool to underpin knowledge production, technological innovation, industrial productivity, competitive regions and national growth. This context poses challenges to those of us seeking to conduct research that builds on the progressive potential of an alternative reading of creativity. There has been an uptake in creative methods in geography and the social sciences, specifically, and for inter- and trans-disciplinary research more widely. However, if not being framed as economically generative, creativity can sometimes be understood as the translational or ‘impact’ component that makes the ‘real research’ accessible to public(s) (Roberts and Phillips 2018; Roberts et al. 2022). Creativity risks becoming a by-word for participation and inclusion, with funders and universities still expecting measurable outputs foremost and failing to understand the value of, and time-resource required, to build the necessary relationships and trust to develop truly participatory creative processes. This means creative research endeavours sometimes result in exclusionary or unequal relationships with communities (Hawkins 2019; Phillips et al 2024; Stephenson 2004).

As such, we are looking for papers addressing:

• the temporalities and spatialities of creativity and creative policies as they extend from/into the university • how institutional infrastructures and mechanisms shape creativity in universities and/or the types of creativity that university infrastructure make easy/difficult • the inclusive and exclusionary impacts on staff, students, and communities of creativity in the university including if or where creativity is censured. • The impact of an economic model of creativity on the university • The relationship between risk and creativity in the university • Examples of radical or transgressive creativity within the university context • Possible models for a future university model that addresses these challenges

Please send abstracts of no more than 300 words, and details of the author(s) including institutional affiliation, to Simon Moreton ((simon.moreton /at/ uwe.ac.uk)) and Liz Roberts ((Liz3.Roberts /at/ uwe.ac.uk)) by 5pm (GMT) Tuesday 4th March (with apologies for short notice!)

References

Bill, A. (2016) ‘Counter-conduct in creative university research: Deliberations on freedom’. Higher Education Research & Development, 36 (2), 241–54. https://doi.org/10.1080/07294360.2016.1208 158.

Dzudzek, I. and Lindner, P. (2015) ‘Performing the creative-economy script: Contradicting urban rationalities at work’. Regional Studies, 49 (3), 388–403. https://doi.org/10.1080/00343404.2013.8 47272.

Hawkins, H. (2019). Geography’s creative (re) turn: Toward a critical framework. Progress in Human Geography, 43(6), 963-984

Moreton, S. (2016) ‘Rethinking “knowledge exchange”: New approaches to collaborative work in the arts and humanities’. International Journal of Cultural Policy, 22 (1), 100–15. https://doi.org/10.1080/10286632.2015.1101081. Moreton, S. (2018) ‘Contributing to the creative economy imaginary: Universities and the creative sector’. Cultural Trends, 27 (5), 327–38. https://doi.org/10.1080/09548963.2018.1534575.
Mould, O. (2018) Against Creativity. London: Verso.

Phillips, O. R., Harries, C., Leonardi-Bee, J., Knight, H., Sherar, L. B., Varela-Mato, V., & Morling, J. R. (2024). What are the strengths and limitations to utilising creative methods in public and patient involvement in health and social care research? A qualitative systematic review. Research Involvement and Engagement, 10(1), 48.

Roberts, L., & Phillips, K. (Eds.). (2018). Water, Creativity and Meaning: Multidisciplinary understandings of human-water relationships. Routledge.

Roberts, L., Liguori, A., McEwen, L., & Wilson, M. (2022). The challenge of engaging communities on hidden risks: co-developing a framework for Adaptive Participatory Storytelling Approaches (APSA). Journal of Extreme Events, 9(02n03), 2341002

Stevenson, D. (2004). “Civic gold” rush: Cultural planning and the politics of the third way. International journal of cultural policy, 10(1), 119-131.

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