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The cultural industries are an area of continued international debate. This edited volume brings together original contributions to examine the experiences and realities of working within a number of creative sectors and address how higher education can both enable students to pursue and critically examine work in the cultural industries.
The cultural industries are an area of continued international debate. This edited volume brings together original contributions to examine the experiences and realities of working within a number of creative sectors and address how higher education can both enable students to pursue and critically examine work in the cultural industries.
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Autorenporträt
Kim Allen, Manchester Metropolitan University, UK Daniel Ashton, Bath Spa University, UK Richard Berger, Bournemouth University, UK David Lee, University of Leeds, UK Karen Littleton, Open University, UK Susan Luckman, University of South Australia, Australia Annette Naudin, University of Warwick, UK Caitriona Noonan, University of Glamorgan, UK Kate Oakley, University of Leeds, UK Emma Pollard, Institute for Employment Studies, UK Anamik Saha, University of Leeds, UK Stephanie Taylor, Open University, UK Jonathan Wardle, National Film and Television School, UK Marketa Zezulkova, Bournemouth University, UK
Inhaltsangabe
List of Contents Introduction: Cultural Work and Higher Education; Daniel Ashton and Caitriona Noonan PART I: THE DYNAMICS OF CULTURAL WORK 1. Making Workers: Higher Education and the Cultural Industries Workplace; Kate Oakley 2. Making Your Way: Empirical Evidence from a Survey of 3,500 Graduates; Emma Pollard PART II: CULTURAL AND CREATIVE INDUSTRIES AND THE CURRICULUM 3. Precariously Mobile: Tensions Between the Local and the Global in Higher Education Approaches to Cultural Work; Susan Luckman 4. No Longer Just Making the Tea: Media Work-Placements and Work-Based Learning in Higher Education; Richard Berger, Jon Wardle, and Marketa Zezulkova 5. Media Enterprise in Higher Education: A Laboratory for Learning; Annette Naudin PART III: IDENTITIES AND TRANSITIONS 6. Smashing Childlike Wonder? The Early Journey into Higher Education; Caitriona Noonan 7. Negotiating a Contemporary Creative Identity; Stephanie Taylor and Karen Littleton 8. Industry Professionals in Higher Education: Values, Identities and Cultural Work; Daniel Ashton PART IV: THE POLITICS OF ACCESS 9. Creative Networks and Social Capital; David Lee 10. The Cultural Industries in a Critical Multicultural Pedagogy; Anamik Saha 11. 'What do you need to make it as a woman in this industry? Balls!': Work Placements, Gender and the Cultural Industries; Kim Allen Afterword: Further and Future Directions for Cultural Work and Higher Education; Daniel Ashton and Caitriona Noonan
List of Contents Introduction: Cultural Work and Higher Education; Daniel Ashton and Caitriona Noonan PART I: THE DYNAMICS OF CULTURAL WORK 1. Making Workers: Higher Education and the Cultural Industries Workplace; Kate Oakley 2. Making Your Way: Empirical Evidence from a Survey of 3,500 Graduates; Emma Pollard PART II: CULTURAL AND CREATIVE INDUSTRIES AND THE CURRICULUM 3. Precariously Mobile: Tensions Between the Local and the Global in Higher Education Approaches to Cultural Work; Susan Luckman 4. No Longer Just Making the Tea: Media Work-Placements and Work-Based Learning in Higher Education; Richard Berger, Jon Wardle, and Marketa Zezulkova 5. Media Enterprise in Higher Education: A Laboratory for Learning; Annette Naudin PART III: IDENTITIES AND TRANSITIONS 6. Smashing Childlike Wonder? The Early Journey into Higher Education; Caitriona Noonan 7. Negotiating a Contemporary Creative Identity; Stephanie Taylor and Karen Littleton 8. Industry Professionals in Higher Education: Values, Identities and Cultural Work; Daniel Ashton PART IV: THE POLITICS OF ACCESS 9. Creative Networks and Social Capital; David Lee 10. The Cultural Industries in a Critical Multicultural Pedagogy; Anamik Saha 11. 'What do you need to make it as a woman in this industry? Balls!': Work Placements, Gender and the Cultural Industries; Kim Allen Afterword: Further and Future Directions for Cultural Work and Higher Education; Daniel Ashton and Caitriona Noonan
Rezensionen
"This is a valuable and timely book that addresses a clear gap in an expanding scholarly field. It makes a strong contribution to the growing literature, exploring what is at stake in the relationship between higher education and the cultural industries, interrogating some of the current challenges and problematic aspects of creative work." - Paul Long, Reader in Media and Cultural History, Birmingham City University, UK "Ashton and Noonan have assembled an impressive array of perspectives that deftly explore the relationships between higher education and the cultural industries workplace. As universities further adapt to market pressures, this book reiterates what remains a fundamentally important question - what is an education in arts and culture really for?" - Mark Banks, Reader in Sociology, The Open University, UK "Universities are increasingly pushed by governments to produce compliant working subjects, and this is increasingly true in the arts and creative industries. This excellent book provides hugely valuable critical perspectives on the implications for cultural workers, for universities, and for us all." - David Hesmondhalgh, Head of the Institute of Communications Studies and Professor of Media and Music Industries, University of Leeds, UK
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