The Politics of Expertise in Cultural Labour: Arts, Work and Inequalities
By (Author) Karen Patel
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield International
16th March 2020
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Social theory
700.103
Hardback
152
Width 160mm, Height 228mm, Spine 16mm
417g
What is expertise In the arts, or cultural work, the experts in this area are commonly regarded to be art critics, dealers or intermediaries. Why are they considered experts What about the expertise of the artists or cultural workers themselves
This book provides a much-needed account of the concept of expertise in cultural work, providing new insights into the individual experiences of cultural workers and the role of social media in their creative practice and development of expertise. It also explores the potential reasons for inequalities in the sector which centre not only on protected characteristics such as class, gender and race, but increasingly the digital divide. Drawing on interviews with cultural workers and an innovative social media analysis, this book highlights the characteristics of aesthetic expertise in production the practical skills cultural workers hone and deploy over years of training and creative practice. This is a new take on aesthetic expertise, which is traditionally associated with those involved in the judgement of culture, such as critics, dealers and intermediaries.
The book highlights how social media platforms both enable and constrain the development of practical aesthetic expertise, and the platforms role in the mediation of the cultural object online. Finally, the book interrogates the power dimensions of expertise, focusing primarily on gender. Drawing on the work of Pierre Bourdieu, it explores how opportunities to develop aesthetic expertise, and the ability to use social media platforms to signal that expertise, are not available to everyone. In this sense, the book adds new perspectives to the growing body of work on inequalities in the creative and cultural industries, as well as scholarship on social media and creative work. The book concludes with the argument that the term expertise needs to be problematised and reclaimed by those who are not equally represented in the cultural industries, using gender as a case in point.
An essential contribution to understand the role of social media in the construction of expertise by cultural workers
In this original and deeply researched book, Karen Patel describes and dissects the lives of cultural workers and the ways in which they build, signal and display their aesthetic expertise. Crucially, she analyses how expertise is performed via social media but she does not assume that these performances and the life circumstances that underpin them are equal or equally visible. It is a book about politics and power as well as likes and hashtags.
Patel's critical exploration of expertise provides a theoretically inventive and empirically rich way to understand and reflect on the contemporary experiences of cultural workers in building careers, networks, and profiles, and developing strategies for more equitable and supportive futures.
Karen Patel is AHRC Creative Economy Engagement Fellow at Birmingham Centre for Media and Cultural Research, Birmingham City University.