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Cultural Expression, Creativity and Innovation

Volume 3 of the Cultures & Globalization series, Cultural Expression, Creativity and Innovation explores the interactions between globalization and the forms of cultural expression that are their basic resource. Bringing together over 25 high- profile authors from around the world, this volume addresses such questions as: What impacts does globalization have on cultural creativity and innovation? How is the evolving world ‘map’ of creativity related to the drivers and patterns of globalization? What are the relationships between creative acts, clusters, genres or institutions and cultural diversity? The volume is an indispensable reference tool for all scholars and students of contemporary arts and culture.

Contents:

Foreword by Stuart Hall / Yudhishthir Raj Isar and Helmut K. Anheier Introduction / PART I: Issues and Patterns in Cultural Expression / Rustom Bharucha Creativity: Alternate Paradigms to the ‘Creative Economy’ / Joni Maya Cherbo and Harold L. Vogel Recognition and Artistic Creativity / Gerardo Mosquera Walking with the Devil: Art, Culture and Internationalization / Gilane Tawadros … But What Is the Question? Art, Research and the Production of Knowledge / Maruška Svašek Improvising in a World of Movement: Transit, Transition and Transformation / Keith Nurse Diasporic Spaces: Migration, Hybridity and the Geocultural Turn / Jason Toynbee Creativity and Intellectual Property Rights / Rasoul Nejadmehr Exile, Culture and Identity / Dragan Klaic The Creativity of Evil? / Paul Brickhill The ‘Creator’ as Entrepreneur: an African Perspective / Annie Paul The Turn of the Native: Vernacular Creativity in the Caribbean / Huda Smitshuijzen AbiFarès Creative Contemporary Design in the Arab World / Laurent Gayer, Christophe Jaffrelot and Malvika Maheshwari Cultural Policing South Asia: an Anti-Globalisation Backlash against Freedom of Expression? / Zala Volcic The Struggle to Express, Create and Represent in the Balkans / Lily Kong Creative Economy, Global City: Globalizing Discourses and the Implications for Local Arts / Peter Tschmuck The Cycles of Creativity in the Music Industry / Clayton Campbell Creative Communities and Emerging Networks / Nancy Duxbury and Catherine Murray Creative Spaces / Stefan Helgesson Literary Hybrids and the Circuits of Translation: the Example of Mia Couto / Ivani Santana Emergencies in Digital Culture / Mo Tomaney and Julie Thomas Fashion and Ethics: Reinventing Models of Consumption and Creativity in a Global Industry / Diana Leat Creativity and Innovation: the Role of Philanthropy / Eugenio Tisselli Digital Networks and Social Innovation: Strategies of the Imagination / Christopher Waterman Closing Reflections / PART II: Indicator Suites / Helmut K. Anheier and Michael Hoelscher Cultural Indicator Suites: An Introduction / Enrico Bertacchini and Walter Santagata Creativity Indexes / Michael Hoelscher Measuring Creativity and Innovation / Policy: Regulatory Frameworks, Intellectual Property / Investment: Education, Philanthropy, Research and Development / Diversity: Institutions, Membership in Organizations, Events,  Places – Indicators for six cities, Migration / Creativity and Hybridity: Indices / Hybridity: Languages, The Blogosphere, Eco Trends and Innovation, Music, New and Syncretic Religions, Dance, Hip Hop, Reality TV, Body Art, Web 2.0 / Helmut K. Anheier and Michael Hoelscher Creativity, Innovation, Globalization: What International Experts Think /

Edited by Helmut Anheier Hertie School of Governance, Heidelberg University and UCLA / Yudhishthir Raj Isar The American University of Paris

Guest Editor : Christopher Waterman Dean of the School of the Arts and Architecture at UCLA

Order here.

SourceYudhishthir (Raj) ISAR (Professor of Cultural Policy Studies / Department of Global Communications / The American University of Paris)

Classé dans:Analyses, Gouvernances, Ingénieries, Politiques culturelles, Ressources, , , , , ,

Istanbul fait partie de l’Europe

Istanbul est avec Essen et Pécs Capitale européenne de la culture 2010. Nedim Gürsel, écrivain turc habitant à Paris, saisit l’occasion pour rendre hommage à sa ville de naissance: “Istanbul est la capitale culturelle de l’Europe en 2010, ce qui pourrait paraître paradoxal pour la capitale des sultans ottomans, mais aussi pour la ville de Pierre Loti, le chantre d’Istanbul … qu’il voulait orientale. Istanbul a fait tant rêver les Européens à la fin du XIXe siècle en tant que porte de l’Orient ou la Sublime Porte, comme on l’appelait à l’époque, qu’il nous est difficile aujourd’hui de la concevoir en dehors de son mythe. Pourtant, à cheval entre les deux continents et reliant les deux rives du Bosphore, cette mégalopole de près de quinze millions d’habitants, qui ne cesse de s’étendre et de se développer, revendique sa place parmi les villes européennes. … Pour avoir visité presque toutes les capitales européennes je ne peux m’empêcher de penser à l’avenir d’une Europe qui laisserait Istanbul hors de ses frontières.”

Source : BpB.

Classé dans:Analyses, Evénements, Gouvernances, , , , ,

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