{"id":5643,"date":"2009-02-18T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2009-02-18T00:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/lafundicio.net\/noticia\/los-usos-de-la-cultura\/"},"modified":"2009-02-18T00:00:00","modified_gmt":"2009-02-18T00:00:00","slug":"los-usos-de-la-cultura","status":"publish","type":"noticia","link":"https:\/\/lafundicio.net\/en\/noticia\/los-usos-de-la-cultura\/","title":{"rendered":"The Uses of Culture"},"content":{"rendered":"<p style=\"text-align: justify\">For some time now, the relationships between culture and the economy have focused the interest of researchers, both in the cultural, economic, and political fields. The use of &#8216;cultural industries&#8217; first, and &#8216;creative&#8217; ones today, as a local and regional economic engine has fully entered the agendas of policymakers and investors. In our context, <a href=\"http:\/\/www.ypsite.net\/investigaciones.php\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">YProducciones&#8217; research<\/a> on the matter is well known. However, it seems to us that the analysis of the social repercussions of &#8216;urban regeneration&#8217; policies through the promotion of these industries has not yet been deepened. This analysis is usually limited to intra-sectoral issues (the extreme precariousness and flexibility of work in culture) or the population displacement associated with the &#8216;gentrification&#8217; processes that accompany the emergence of &#8216;creative districts&#8217;.    <\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify\">We sense, however, that the implementation of economic models based on culture and creativity entails even deeper social inequalities. We recently discovered the work of the <g id=\"gid_0\">Social Impact of the Arts Project<\/g> (SIAP) research group of the <g id=\"gid_1\">School of Social Policy &amp; Practice<\/g> of the <g id=\"gid_2\">University of Pennsylvania<\/g>, which has conducted its research in the metropolitan area of <g id=\"gid_3\">Philadelphia<\/g>, focusing on the links between &#8220;the structure of the creative sector, the dynamics of cultural participation, and the relationship of the arts with community well-being.&#8221; In a document published in 2008, entitled <strong><br \/>\n  <em><br \/>\n    <a href=\"http:\/\/www.trfund.com\/resource\/downloads\/creativity\/Economy.pdf\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">From Creative Economy to Creative Society<\/a><br \/>\n  <\/em><br \/>\n<\/strong> (pdf), the SIAP team, formed by <strong>Mark J. Stern<\/strong> and <strong>Susan C. Seifert<\/strong>, advocates for a kind of &#8220;third way&#8221; alternative to the merely economistic policies of promoting the creative sector and the community cultural development policies <em>tout court<\/em>.  <\/p>\n<p><!--more--><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify\">Their proposal is based on the promotion and cultivation of what they call, using what seems like a complete oxymoron, &#8220;natural cultural districts.&#8221; We don&#8217;t quite grasp the difference between these &#8220;natural cultural districts&#8221; and what, by opposition, would be &#8216;artificial cultural districts&#8217;, but it seems to us that the analysis on which the SIAP proposal is based points to some reflections to take into account: Firstly, Stern and Seifert point out that most urban regeneration policies through the promotion of creative industries fall on a misconception of creativity according to which it is still understood as an innate gift enjoyed by a few chosen individuals. On the contrary, creative processes can be understood as collective processes that depend on a complex infrastructure of social and spatial networks. It is in this sense that Stern and Seifert propose to define the cultural sector as an &#8220;ecosystem&#8221; &#8211; a term copied from the one used, in a similar sense, by <strong>Reinaldo Laddaga<\/strong> in his <strong><br \/>\n  <em>Aesthetics of emergence<\/em><br \/>\n<\/strong>-.   <\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify\">The individualistic conception of creativity is associated with what Stern and Seifert call &#8220;<em>winner-take-all labor markets<\/em>&#8220;, that is, labor markets in which a select few obtain extraordinary benefits compared to a large majority whose work is not only poorly paid, but also lacks recognition and is made invisible. As <strong>Richard Florida<\/strong> himself observed in 2005, just three years after the publication of <strong><br \/>\n  <em>The rise of the creative class<\/em><br \/>\n<\/strong> &#8211; the book that almost all of the policies to promote the creative sector that we are discussing follow to the letter -: &#8221; <em>Perhaps the most outstanding of what I consider the externalities of the creative era has to do with the increase in social and economic inequality. Less than a third of the workforce &#8211; the creative class &#8211; is employed in the creative sector of the economy. [&#8230;] And what is even more discouraging, inequality is considerably more pronounced in the leading creative regions. [&#8230;] The creative economy is giving rise to a pronounced social and political polarization.   <\/em>&#8220;<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify\">It seems to us that in their study Stern and Seifert do not delve sufficiently into the processes from which this social polarization results. Following Florida&#8217;s teachings, the political leaders of cities with global pretensions have launched themselves into a frantic competition; in this singular race, cities exhibit and offer their charms in order to attract the members of that creative class who are to become engines of economic development. Let&#8217;s take the case of <g id=\"gid_0\">Barcelona<\/g>, it would suffice to recall the recent statements of the mayor <g id=\"gid_1\">Jordi Hereu<\/g> regarding the escape to <g id=\"gid_2\">Berlin<\/g> of the fair <g id=\"gid_3\"><br \/>\n  <g id=\"gid_4\">Bread &amp; Butter<\/g><br \/>\n<\/g>. Let us remember that the German capital offered the organizers of the fair the old airport of <strong>Tempelhof<\/strong> as a venue; faced with this offer, Mayor Hereu assured that he would not enter into a bid, but that if Barcelona had anything to offer, it was the city itself, in its entirety, &#8220;<em>a wonderful city<\/em>&#8220;, he said.   <\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify\">The city itself is offered as the stage for work and economic activity in the age of creativity, among other things because creative work is no longer done in a specific time and space, as we well know. The city is offered as a stage for a lifestyle-work. The question that Stern and Seifert do not quite formulate is: who is in charge of maintaining and fine-tuning that stage? who operates the engine room of the creative classes&#8217; lifestyle? and what is the social cost of that division of labor? While the creative classes enjoy a lifestyle that is in itself a mode of production -so that pleasure and work appear inseparable- in the &#8220;wonderful&#8221; environment of the cultural and technological districts of urban centers, those two-thirds of the population to which Florida referred and who are not employed in the creative industries -among whom are those in charge of maintaining the immaterial factory that is the city- live in other parts of the metropolitan areas.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify\">This spatial nuance would not be relevant if it were not because it is there where a curious dissymmetry occurs with respect to the instrumentalization of culture: while in the creative districts it is used as an economic resource, capable of generating symbolic and monetary value, in the periphery of urban centers culture is used as a resource in a completely different sense: It is intended that, through the policies of &#8220;proximity culture&#8221; or &#8220;community cultural development&#8221;, culture acts as a kind of social glue that, without knowing very well how, improves the living conditions of these communities and especially of the groups considered in &#8220;situation of risk&#8221; or &#8220;special attention&#8221;, among which are usually young people, women or migrants. In an article published in 1995 and titled <strong><br \/>\n  <em><br \/>\n    <a href=\"http:\/\/findarticles.com\/p\/articles\/mi_m2479\/is_n6_v22\/ai_16737233\">Aesthetic evangelists: conversion and empowerment in contemporary community art<\/a><br \/>\n  <\/em><br \/>\n<\/strong>, <strong>Grant Kester<\/strong> examined what he calls &#8220;the moral economy&#8221; of community artistic practices; it is true that his analysis is very rooted in the American context, but we can draw some useful conclusions for ourselves: his main objective is to point out &#8220;<em>to what extent those of us committed to a progressive cultural practice might be inadvertently corroborating certain structural features of conservative positions<\/em>&#8220;. This doubt or suspicion has an extensive journey that Kester unravels meticulously throughout the article (which deserves a careful reading). This suspicion is based on the idea that the moral economy of the Victorian era persists in the practices of some artists who work with communities; this is so when these practices take for granted, in a more or less implicit way, that &#8221;   <em>the &#8220;causes&#8221; of poverty and loss of agency are mainly individual rather than systemic. Within this dynamic, the subject of reform (the &#8220;poor&#8221;, the &#8220;indigent&#8221;, etc.), is understood as a kind of resource or raw material that has to be transformed <\/em>&#8220;. As Kester very well clarifies, &#8220;<em>no one will oppose that someone is able to give a positive turn to their life, however what is potentially sacrificed with this testimony is the recognition that people do not lack a roof simply because of their low self-esteem, but because of an entire range of political and economic forces that [conservative thought] longs to obscure and naturalize<\/em>&#8220;.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[],"class_list":["post-5643","noticia","type-noticia","status-publish","hentry"],"acf":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/lafundicio.net\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/noticia\/5643","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/lafundicio.net\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/noticia"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/lafundicio.net\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/noticia"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/lafundicio.net\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=5643"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/lafundicio.net\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=5643"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}