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Creative Labour David Hesmondhalgh

Creative Labour By David Hesmondhalgh

Creative Labour by David Hesmondhalgh


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Summary

What is it like to work in the media? Are media jobs more 'creative' than those in other sectors? This book explores these issues in the creative industries, using a combination of original research and a synthesis of existing studies.

Creative Labour Summary

Creative Labour: Media Work in Three Cultural Industries by David Hesmondhalgh

The theoretical issues raised across these various sources are investigated via empirical research carried out across three major contemporary media industries: television, recording and magazine publishing. This research draws on a number of methods:

  • semi-structured interviews with 60 personnel - mainly 'creatives' but also craft and technical workers, managers, marketing personnel and others who work with and alongside them.
  • participant observation
  • secondary sources, especially trade magazines associated with the three industries we have analysed.
  • textual analysis of the products that are produced by some of the creative worlds we studied, including the participant observation study.
  • it also seeks intermittently to understand the influence of the field of textual representations of work (drawing on the fine work of Matt Stahl) more generally by reference to films, television programmes and books about creative labour.

Creative Labour Reviews

'A major new study of creative labour. This is an important book that will become a classic in the field. Required reading for anyone interested in the nature, experience and quality of work in the media and cultural industries.' Rosalind Gill, Professor of Social and Cultural Analysis, King's College London, UK

'This will be a model for others to emulate, in its clarity of thought and expression, thoroughness of analysis, and respect for the particularities of the lives it explores. I can only hope that it receives ample flattery of imitation by inspiring others to follow in its footsteps.' Larry Gross, Professor and Director, The Annenberg School for Communication & Journalism, University of Southern California

'Anyone interested in the so-called creative or cultural industries will find this book essential reading.' Peter Golding, Professor and Pro-Vice Chancellor, Northumbria University, UK

'Hesmondhalgh and Baker's thorough and intelligent analysis of the nature and experience of work in television, magazine publishing and music, draws-out the characteristic features and the ambiguities of work inherent in these segments of the economy. Their close examination of the meaning of good and bad work takes the discussion onto another plane and makes the book of wide contemporary relevance across the economy as a whole.' John Storey, Professor of Human Resource Management at The Open University Business School, UK

The power of this text rests largely on the authors' decision to situate their rich, multimethod empirical research within a detailed and interdisciplinary framework of contested theoretical analyses... A detailed, insightful and stimulating analysis of experiences of creative labour in the cultural industries. - Work, Employment and Society

Hesmondhalgh and Baker have produced a fascinating book that is greater than the sum of the parts. They socialise subjective experience. This creative transmutation of social theory and empirical evidence sets a high standard for further research. - Media, Culture and Society

Through a thorough reading of the most authoritative philosophical and sociological literature on work, the authors convincingly establish the criteria of what is generally held as being good work... [T]he use of emotional labour - a concept that has gained a lot of currency in management and organization studies - is a brilliant demonstration of the authors' capacity to borrow from different fields in meaningful ways. - Cultural Trends

This is a valuable book in the way it successfully synthesizes theory and experience. Its final stance is one of social justice: not to understand creative labour in the service of creative industries boosterism, but its consideration of the distribution of good and bad work across societies. - International Journal of Cultural Policy

Creative Labour represents, in many ways, the culmination of a number of theoretical and empirical investigations of cultural work....[It] is ambitious in scope and depth, rewarding the careful reader with a dazzling range of accounts of the daily working lives of 'creatives'. - Cultural Sociology

Hesmondhalgh and Baker analyse the quality of workers' experiences in jobs in ... the'cultural industries'.... This emphasis on quality of work ... make[s] the book an especially compelling contribution to the field - Cultural Studies Review

Though the authors' sympathy clearly lies with the critical stance of cultural studies, the book is a worthy addition to scholarship on cultural sociology and the sociology of work. - Contemporary Sociology

[A]n insightful contribution that effectively advances understanding of the experience of working in knowledge economy jobs. - Work and Occupations

About David Hesmondhalgh

David Hesmondhalgh teaches in the Institute of Communications Studies at the University of Leeds, where he is Professor of Media and Music Industries, Director of Research, and Head of the Media Industries Research Centre (MIRC). His publications include The Cultural Industries (2nd edition, 2007).

Sarah Baker is Lecturer in Cultural Sociology at Griffith University, Australia. She has previously held research fellowships at The Open University and University of Leeds, UK, and the University of South Australia. She is the author of numerous refereed journal articles and book chapters.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction: Can Creative Labour be Good Work? Part 1 2. A Model of Good and Bad Work 3. The Specificity of Creative Labour Part 2 4. The Management of Autonomy, Creativity and Commerce 5. Pay, Hours, Security, Involvement, Esteem and Freedom 6. Creative Careers, Self-Realisation and Sociality 7. Emotional and Affective Labour 8. Creative Products, Good and Bad 9. Audiences, Quality and the Meaning of Creative Work 10. The Politics of Good and Bad Work. Bibliography. Appendix: The Interviews

Additional information

NPB9780415572606
9780415572606
0415572606
Creative Labour: Media Work in Three Cultural Industries by David Hesmondhalgh
New
Hardback
Taylor & Francis Ltd
2010-10-29
276
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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