Creative industries are a growing and globally
important area for both economic vitality and cultural expression of
industrialized nations. The growth and
dynamism of creative industries depends on “continuous innovation” that must
manage inherent tensions such as novelty to attract consumers and sustain
artistic expression and familiarity to aid comprehension and stabilize demand
for cultural products.
In this volume, the macro-structural
conditions that shape creative industries – their institutional, categorical
and structural dynamics- are examined to provide an overview of new trends and
emerging issues in scholarship on this topic. Creative industries offer products and
services that range from the prosaic to the sublime and provide meaning to our
lives, and this volume features a wide range of examples, from advertising, to
architecture, art markets, Champagne wine, fashion and music. Contributors examine topics such as the micro-interactions
of brokerage relations; how actors transform a brokerage role from control to
co-production to enact creative leadership; how investors provide legitimacy to
the new categories such as abstract art; how technological disintermediation
creates alternative category processes such as authenticity; how social
relations shape social evaluation; how prototypical producers can trespass
categories and avert negative evaluation; how personal styles enable social
evaluation; and how the ambiguity of a category, such as Swing music,
facilitated its adaptability and longevity.
The volume concludes with an Afterword examining research on creative
industries as a form of cultural product and a category in itself.
Price: $134.99
Pages: 304
Publisher: Emerald Publishing Limited
Imprint: Emerald Publishing Limited
Series: Research in the Sociology of Organizations
Publication Date:
03 April 2018
ISBN: 9781787437746
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:
BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / General, Industry & industrial studies, BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Industries / General, BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Organizational Behavior
This volume brings together 10 essays by management and other scholars from Europe and the US, who examine social structural and categorical aspects that impact creative industries, focusing on the production and evaluation of creative products in architecture, art markets, advertising, music, and the wine industry. They discuss broker styles in interactions with others in creative projects, creative leadership processes for social impact, how investors impact the art world, the concept of style and how styles impact evaluations of an organization’s creative performance, the influence of status and social distance in evaluative processes in advertising, the role of authenticity and algorithms in digitized music, category longevity in the area of swing music, and default expectations about champagne producers. The book is based on the Creative Industries conference held in July 2016 in Edinburgh, Scotland.
Candace Jones is the Chair of Global Creative
Enterprise at the University of Edinburgh Business School, UK. She is co-editor
of
The Oxford Handbook of Creative Industries and is on the Editorial
Review Boards of
Academy of Management
Review, Journal of Professions and Organization, Organization Science and Organization Studies.Massimo Maoret is Assistant
Professor at IESE Business School, USA, and a Marie Curie Fellow of the
European Commission. His work has appeared in multiple prestigious academic
journals, including Organization
Science, the Strategic
Management Journal, Advances in
Strategic Management and the Proceedings of the Academy of Management.
Introduction;
Candace Jones and Massimo Maoret
1. Brokerage Styles and Interaction Rituals in Creative Projects: Towards an Interactionist Perspective on Brokerage; Santi Furnari and Marianna Rolbina
2. Creative Leadership for Social Innovation; Silviya Svejenova and Lærke Christiansen
3. Strange Bedfellows: Art and Finance or the Monet-ization of Art; Stoyan Sgourev
4. Why is style not in fashion? Using the concept of "style" to understand the creative industries; Frédéric Godart
5. The Social Structure of Consecration in Cultural Fields: The Influence of Status, Social Distance and Positive Ties in Audience-Candidate Evaluative Processes; Erik Aadland, Gino Cattani and Simone Ferriani
6. Institutionalizing Authenticity in the Digitized World of Music; Noah Askin and Joeri Mol
7. Ambiguity and the Longevity of Creative Industries: The Case of Swing through the Lens of Interdisciplinary Collaboration; Sonia Coman-Ernstoff and Damon Phillips
8. Not the usual suspects: Default expectations and the strategic use of categories; Amandine Ody-Brazier
Afterword: The Creative Industries - Arts and Materiality Redux; Paul Hirsch and Kartikeya Bajpai