Beyond Cultural Intermediaries? A socio-technical perspective on culturalization and the market for social interventions.
Moor, Liz. 2012. Beyond Cultural Intermediaries? A socio-technical perspective on culturalization and the market for social interventions. European Journal of Cultural Studies, 15(5), pp. 563-580. ISSN 1367-5494 [Article]
No full text availableAbstract or Description
Marketing has long been considered part of cultural intermediary activity, but still sits a little oddly alongside the ‘cultural’ TV producers and ‘quality’ journalists and critics originally used to typify the category. This article argues that such a tension is productive, and uses an underexplored aspect of marketing – social marketing – to pursue some more conceptual questions about the nature and usefulness of the term ‘cultural intermediaries’. It employs a framework loosely derived from actor-network theory to describe the emergence of social marketing in Britain, paying particular attention to the efforts to construct a market for such services, the need to consider material and non-human forms of agency in cultural intermediary activity, and the value of understanding cultural intermediary work in terms of ‘culturalisation’ – that is, as a process by which some areas of life are designated as belonging to the problem of culture, and others not.
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Article |
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Departments, Centres and Research Units: |
Media, Communications and Cultural Studies |
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Item ID: |
4131 |
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Date Deposited: |
08 Oct 2012 19:43 |
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Last Modified: |
27 Jun 2017 14:46 |
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Peer Reviewed: |
Yes, this version has been peer-reviewed. |
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