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Rosalind Gill, Professor of Cultural and Social Analysis, City University of London, UK
This is a dazzling and important book. Meticulously researched, Scharff documents the ways in which female classical musicians experience their own professional identities and how they become 'entrepreneurial subjects'. Scharff plays close attention to the texture of inequities in this milieu, and to how competition takes specifically gendered forms. The book is a major contribution to creative economy studies, to sociology, social psychology and gender studies.
Angela McRobbie, Professor of Communications, Goldsmiths University of London, UK
Christina Scharff's book is a superbly thoughtful and insightful feminist study of women musicians in two contrasting cities, and it is also a major contribution to studies of creative labour. It shows how cultural workers are required to be entrepreneurs - and skilfully reveals how this contributes to workplace inequalities.
David Hesmondhalgh, Professor of Media, Music and Culture, University of Leeds, UK