Arts and cultural management : sense and sensibilities in the state of the field /
edited by Constance DeVereaux.
- Routledge, 2020
- xxx, 281 pages ; 24 cm.
- Routledge research in creative and cultural industries management .
sense and sensibilities in the state of the field
Section 1: Arts and Cultural Management. Exploring the Field - 1. Cultural Management as a Field (Constance DeVereaux) - 2. Arts and Cultural Management (Fang Hua) - 3. Towards a Sociology of Arts Managers (Vincent Dubois and Victor Lepaux) - 4. Situating Cultural Management (Anke Schad) - 5. Death of the Arts Manager (Aleksandar Brkić) - Section 2: The State of Arts and Cultural Management Research - 6. Cultural Management Research (Constance DeVereaux) - 7. The Orthodoxy of Cultural Management Research and Possible Paths Beyond it (Goran Tomka) - 8. Why are Evaluations in the Field of Cultural Policy (Almost Always) Contested? (Tasos Zembylas) - 9. Arts Marketing (Patrick Germain-Thomas) - 10. The Reality of Cultural Work (Kerry McCall) - Section 3: Arts and Cultural Management Discourses - 11. Cultural Management and its Discontents (Constance DeVereaux) - 12. Silence in Cultural Management (Njörður Sigurjónsson) - 13. Managing Utopias (Volker Kirchberg) - 14. Toward a Practical Theory of Managing the Arts (Julian Stahl and Martin Tröndle).
'Arts and Cultural Management: Sense and Sensibilities in the State of the Field opens a conversation that is much needed for anyone identifying arts management or cultural management as primary areas of research, teaching, or practice. In the evolution of any field arises the need for scrutiny, reflection, and critique, as well as to display the advancements and diversity in approaches and thinking that contribute to a discipline's forward progression. While no one volume could encompass all that a discipline is or should be, a representational snapshot serves as a valuable benchmark. This book is addressed to those who operate as researchers, scholars, and practitioners of arts and cultural management. Driven by concerns about quality of life, globalization, development of economies, education of youth, the increasing mobility of cultural groups, and many other significant issues of the twenty-first century, governments and individuals have increasingly turned to arts and culture as means of mitigating or resolving tough policy issues. For their growth, arts and culture sectors depend on people in positions of leadership and management who play a significant role in the creation, production, exhibition, dissemination, interpretation, and evaluation of arts and culture experiences for publics and policies. Less than a century old as a formal field of inquiry, however, arts and cultural management has been in flux since its inception. What is arts and cultural management? remains an open question. A comprehensive literature on the discipline, as an object of study, is still developing. This State of the Discipline offers a benchmark for those interested in the evolution and development of arts and cultural management as a branch of knowledge alongside more established disciplines of research and scholarship.'--Provided by publisher.