Cultural work and creative subjectivity: Recentralising the artist critique and social networks in the cultural industries

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    1 Citation (Scopus)

    Abstract

    This book critically investigates the declining status of creative workers in contemporary societies following changes associated with the neoliberal creativity discourse – from the distribution of resources around cultural production to consumption, and from the management of ‘labour time’ to ‘life time’. These changes have narrowed career pathways for creative workers, resulting in exploitative working conditions for both professionals and amateurs. The contemporary cultural industries accentuate entrepreneurialism, informed by ‘social network markets’ and a capacity to engage technologised consumer culture. This book suggests that a radically different view is needed to understand how creative workers justify their continued participation in the cultural industries. It pays particular attention to the identities of marginalised cultural workers (underpaid or under-rewarded) and argues that cultural work cannot be understood as a route into entrapment by self-exploitation (sacrificial labour) nor as an abstract form of creative autonomy. Creative workers must engage the ‘artist critique’ to re-claim the social values of making culture as ‘public labour’. Bringing together theory and practice via contemporary case studies, this book is a significant contribution to research on the cultural economy and will be of interest to researchers in this field and practitioners in the management of cultural work.

    Original languageEnglish
    Place of PublicationAbingdon UK
    PublisherRoutledge
    Number of pages210
    Edition1st
    ISBN (Electronic)9781003169888
    ISBN (Print)9780367771195, 9780367771218
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2024

    Keywords

    • arts and cultural policy
    • cultural and creative industries
    • creative cities
    • social network market
    • creative entrepreneurship
    • cultural work
    • Digital media

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