Institute of Network Cultures on Thu, 2 Mar 2006 22:34:01 +0100 (CET)
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[Nettime-nl] MyCreativity -- eerste aankondiging
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MyCreativity
Convention of International Creative Industries Researchers
First Announcement
Date: 17-18 November, 2006
Venue: Club 11, Post CS Building, Amsterdam
Organisation: Institute of Network Cultures, HvA and Centre for Media
Research, University of Ulster
Concept: Geert Lovink & Ned Rossiter
More information: info@networkcultures.org, Sabine Niederer.
www.networkcultures.org/mycreativity
Introduction
Emerging out of Blair's Britain in the late 90s as an antidote to
post-industrial unemployment, early creative industries discourse was
notable for a promotional hype characteristic of the dot.com era in the
US. Over the past 3-5 years creative industries has undergone a process
of internationalisation and become a permanent fixture in the
short-term interests that define government policy packages across the
world. At the policy level, creative industries have managed to
transcend the North-South divide that preoccupied research on the
information economies and communication technologies for two decades.
Today, one finds countries as diverse as Austria, Brazil, Singapore and
New Zealand eagerly promoting the promise of exceptional economic
growth rates of "culture" in its "immaterial" form. Governments in Hong
Kong, Japan, Australia, and the Netherlands have initiated creative
industries policy platforms with remarkably similar assumptions and
expectations given their very different cultural and political
environments.
Despite the proliferation of the creative industries model, it remains
hard to point to stories of actual "creative innovation", or to be even
sure what this might mean. What is clear – if largely unacknowledged –
is that investment in "creative clusters" effectively functions to
encourage a corresponding boom in adjacent real estate markets. Here
lies perhaps the core truth of the creative industries: the creative
industries are a service industry, one in which state investment in
"high culture" shifts to a form of welfarism for property developers.
This smoke and mirrors trick is cleverly performed through a language
of populist democracy that appeals to a range of political and business
agents. What is more surprising is the extent to which this hype is
seemingly embraced by those most vulnerable: namely, the content
producers (designers, software inventors, artists, filmmakers, etc.) of
creative information (brands, patents, copyrights).
Much research in the creative industries is highly speculative,
interpretive and economistic, concerned with large-scale industry data
rather than the network of formal and informal relations that make
possible creative production. It is also usually produced quickly, with
little detailed qualitative analysis of the structure of economic
relationships creative industries firms operate in. In many cases, the
policy discourses travel and are taken up without critical appraisal of
distinctly local conditions.
In contrast to the homogeneity of creative industries at the policy
level, there is much localised variation to be found in terms of the
material factors that shape the development of creative industries
projects. For example, a recent UNCTAD (2004) policy report on creative
industries and development makes note of the “‘precarious”’ nature of
employment for many within the creative industries. Such attention to
the uneven and variable empirics of creative industries marks a
departure from much of the hype that characterised earlier creative
industries discourse, and also reflects the spread of this discourse
out of highly developed market economies to ones where the private
sector has a very different role.
This conference wishes to bring these trends and tendencies into
critical question. It seeks to address the local, intra-regional and
trans-national variations that constitute international creative
industries as an uneven field of actors, interests and conditions. The
conference explores a range of key topics that, in the majority of
cases, remain invisible to both academic research and policy-making in
the creative industries.
Overall, the conference adopts a comparative focus in order to
illuminate the variability of international creative industries. Such
an approach enables new questions to be asked about the mutually
constitutive tensions between the forces, practices, histories and
policies that define creative production, distribution and organisation
within an era of information economies and network cultures.
Themes and Sessions
=Critique of Creative Industries=
There is little empirical correspondence between the topography of
"mapping documents" and "value-chains" and the actual social networks
and cultural flows that comprise the business activities and movement
of finance capital, information and labour-power within creative
economies. Such attempts to register the mutual production of economic
and creative value are inherently reductive systems. Much creative
industries discourse in recent years places an emphasis on the
potential for creative clusters, hubs and precincts to develop cultural
economies. The limits and political problematic of existing
methodologies such as these are considerable.
Complexity is not something that is easily accommodated in the genre of
policy and the activities of what remain vertically integrated
institutional settings. In undertaking a critique of the simplicity
characteristic of much creative industries policy, this session
explores the ways in which the experiences of workers, businesses and
government and the structural formations of the creative industries can
be better understood in terms of the complexity of information
economies and network societies.
=Creative Labour and Precarity=
Since the initial policy reports by the Blair government’s Department
of Communications, Media, and Sport (1998/2001), governments around the
world have reproduced the key definition of creative industries as
consisting of ‘the generation and exploitation of intellectual
property’ (DCMS, 1998/2001). Key to this definition is the invisible
subject of exploitation: namely, those engaged in the production of
creative commodities and services. Such work is largely undertaken by
young people, who have no experience or identification with traditional
labour organisations, such as the trade union. The reasons for this are
historical, generational and structural: young people do not have
formal or cultural associations with vertically organised institutional
settings in the way that workers did during the modern era of
industrial capitalism. This session investigates the precarious
conditions of labour and life within the creative industries.
=Creative Industries--Made in Europe=
Europe has long prided itself as the origin of (state funded and
guided) creativity, but the romanticism that underpins this arrogance
and institutional power is no longer viable in the context of economic
globalisation. With its system of protectionist policies and welfare
states still relatively intact, albeit considerably battered, countries
across Europe have been comparatively slow to incorporate the UK-model
of creative industries in their policy agendas. This is gradually
changing and will no doubt continue to do so as the EU forces resistant
states to conform to international policy trends and trade agreements.
On the one hand, this session is interested in the distinctive cultural
variations that define creative work across European countries. And
then, on the other hand, the session is interested in the kinds of
connections being made at social and economic levels between European
countries. Is it still possible, beyond tourism, to speak of "Europe"
in a global economy of trade and services?
=Creative Industries and the Arts=
It is not difficult to understand why the hype around creative
industries has been perceived as a threat in traditional visual arts
circles. Are “contemporary arts” and “creative industries” ordinary
competitors that compete over scarce resources, or is there more to
this tension? The creative industries discourse can easily be read as a
declaration of war against closed and elitist art systems, and much of
that critique might be justified. But there are also millions of good
reasons to defend the “senseless acts of beauty” against cold and
instrumentalised market thinking. The autonomy of the arts may as well
be read as a right, built up through struggles against the grip of the
church and the aristocratic class on the arts. But what remains in the
ruins of the Arts as a source of renewal and mobilisation within a
paradigm of info-economies?
=Creative Industries in China and the Asia-Pacific=
One is hard pressed to find comparative research that examines the
inter-relations between geo-politics (regional trade agreements,
national and multi-lateral policies on labour mobility, security and
migration, etc.) and the peculiarities of intra-regional, trans-local
and global cultural flows. For many, the creative industries are an
exclusively Anglo-American and now European phenomenon. This session is
interested in the Asia-Pacific experiences of creative industries.
Of particular interest is the case of China, which is rapidly emerging
as the dominant player in the global economy. How is “culture” being
understood as an economic resource in China? Who are the key players
and what sort of cross-sectoral relations are emerging? How are artists
positioning themselves in political and economic senses? To what extent
are external influences and architectures (e.g. WTO and IPRs) shaping
the creative industries formation in China and the Asia-Pacific region?
=Complementary and Alternative Business Models=
For all the talk about culture as a generator of economic capital, the
relation between the two continues to be neglected in much research and
is difficult for many to understand. The economic models applied to
cultural production in an era of broadcast media have proven to be
inadequate to this period of networked media. And the follies of the
dot.com boom were all too clear – though this is still ignored by many
creative industries policy-makers and advocates. The search for
alternative business models for the creative industries is currently at
a fairly experimental stage, and there’s little scope for
transferability due to national and cultural contingencies (though this
too is often ignored). How can creative work become sustainable, beyond
state subsidies and hyped markets? Do we necessarily have to buy into
intellectual property regimes? What is the economic reality of Creative
Commons?
=Conclusion: Subterranean Creativity=
There is without doubt a discord between the “mapping documents”
produced by government departments and academics across the world and
the on-the-ground experiences of creative workers. These empirical
exercises function as an abstract expression to be circulated amongst
like-minded institutions seeking self-produced validation. But how are
young creative producers making sense – if at all – of the policy
directives being set out for them by government departments? What sort
of languages, expressions, connections are made and circulated here?
And what, if any, mobilising capacity do such relations enable with
regard to a different form of organisational power?
Format/Logistics
This event will be run in collaboration with All Media Foundation and
The Sandberg Institute, who will present the latest installment that
engages the topic of "organised creativity". The opening evening will
present a show in Paradiso (16 November, 2006), titled Paradise by the
Laptop Light, a concept of Mieke Gerritzen and Koert van Mensvoort.
Leading up this event, post-graduate design students from the Sandberg
Institute will be undertaking a study of creative industries
topographies and typologies in the Netherlands. These activities
include a free newspaper and will feature in the conference session on
Subterrainean Creativity.
This international conference will be used as a preliminary meeting of
an emerging network of researchers that critically engage with the
creative industries field. The event also introduces the novel format
of the conference "package tour", with a follow-up conference – A
Network of Networks – held in Belfast, 19-21 November. This event will
be also be organised by the Institute of Network Cultures and the
Centre for Media Research, along with other partners.
Mailing list
If you are interested to join the network mailing list, you can
subscribe by going to the following:
http://idash.org/mailman/listinfo/ci-l
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