Authors
Jamie Peck
Publication date
2005/12
Journal
International Journal of Urban and Regional Research
Volume
29
Issue
4
Pages
740-770
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd.
Description
This article develops a critique of the recently popularized concepts of the ‘creative class’ and ‘creative cities’. The geographic reach and policy salience of these discourses is explained not in terms of their intrinsic merits, which can be challenged on a number of grounds, but as a function of the profoundly neoliberalized urban landscapes across which they have been traveling. For all their performative display of liberal cultural innovation, creativity strategies barely disrupt extant urban‐policy orthodoxies, based on interlocal competition, place marketing, property‐ and market‐led development, gentrification and normalized socio‐spatial inequality. More than this, these increasingly prevalent strategies extend and recodify entrenched tendencies in neoliberal urban politics, seductively repackaging them in the soft‐focus terms of cultural policy. This has the effect of elevating creativity to the status of a new urban …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
J Peck - International journal of urban and regional research, 2005
J Peck - Studies in Political Economy conference, York …, 2005