Governing Baltimore by Music: Insights from Governance and Governmentality Studies
Research output: Contributions to collected editions/works › Contributions to collected editions/anthologies › Research › peer-review
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Music City: Musikalische Annäherung an die „kreative Stadt“. ed. / Alenka Barber-Kersovan; Volker Kirchberg; Robin Kuchar. 1. ed. Bielefeld: transcript Verlag, 2014. p. 169-198 (Urban Studies).
Research output: Contributions to collected editions/works › Contributions to collected editions/anthologies › Research › peer-review
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TY - CHAP
T1 - Governing Baltimore by Music
T2 - Insights from Governance and Governmentality Studies
AU - Kirchberg, Volker
PY - 2014/3/28
Y1 - 2014/3/28
N2 - My criticism of a hierarchically enforced cultural policy is based on the understanding that the contemporary governmental obsession about generating ‘creative cities’ from the top down is an impossible effort for achieving ‘urban creativity’. Instead, my concept of a successful creative self-governance from the bottom up is exemplified here by specific urban structures and socio-political functions of two local popular music scenes in Baltimore, the Baltimore Club scene, and the Experimental/Instrumental scene. Both scenes are illustrations for a musical creativity that has prospered in Baltimore in the last years not despite but because of the lack of any governmental top-down interventions. The concept of self-governance is linked with the concept of governmentality by Foucault and his successors. In my own interpretation of governmentality, the chosen music scenes are interpreted as ‘regimes of practice’ with four empirically observable dimensions: visibility (in the case of music: auralization), knowledge (about styles, genres and bands), techniques (means of music production, distribution, consumption), and identities (cohesion through values and conventions). As the major characteristic of these musical ‘regimes of practice’, the ‘conduct by self-conduct’ expedites a creative process that also has become an important urban political factor because it shapes the community from the bottom up. Baltimore’s unplanned governmental ‘laissez faire’ attitude toward these cultural regimes is also sustainable because the successful local music scenes are communities steered by networks of artists and arts institutions that are diverse, resilient to outside pressure, and mostly devoid of coercion; instead they are based on volunteerism and inherent gratification.
AB - My criticism of a hierarchically enforced cultural policy is based on the understanding that the contemporary governmental obsession about generating ‘creative cities’ from the top down is an impossible effort for achieving ‘urban creativity’. Instead, my concept of a successful creative self-governance from the bottom up is exemplified here by specific urban structures and socio-political functions of two local popular music scenes in Baltimore, the Baltimore Club scene, and the Experimental/Instrumental scene. Both scenes are illustrations for a musical creativity that has prospered in Baltimore in the last years not despite but because of the lack of any governmental top-down interventions. The concept of self-governance is linked with the concept of governmentality by Foucault and his successors. In my own interpretation of governmentality, the chosen music scenes are interpreted as ‘regimes of practice’ with four empirically observable dimensions: visibility (in the case of music: auralization), knowledge (about styles, genres and bands), techniques (means of music production, distribution, consumption), and identities (cohesion through values and conventions). As the major characteristic of these musical ‘regimes of practice’, the ‘conduct by self-conduct’ expedites a creative process that also has become an important urban political factor because it shapes the community from the bottom up. Baltimore’s unplanned governmental ‘laissez faire’ attitude toward these cultural regimes is also sustainable because the successful local music scenes are communities steered by networks of artists and arts institutions that are diverse, resilient to outside pressure, and mostly devoid of coercion; instead they are based on volunteerism and inherent gratification.
KW - Cultural Distribution/Cultural Organization
KW - Musik
KW - Culture and Space
KW - Governance
KW - Sociology
KW - Kultursoziologie
UR - http://www.transcript-verlag.de/978-3-8376-1965-2/music-city
U2 - 10.14361/transcript.9783839419656.169
DO - 10.14361/transcript.9783839419656.169
M3 - Contributions to collected editions/anthologies
SN - 978-3-8376-1965-2
T3 - Urban Studies
SP - 169
EP - 198
BT - Music City
A2 - Barber-Kersovan, Alenka
A2 - Kirchberg, Volker
A2 - Kuchar, Robin
PB - transcript Verlag
CY - Bielefeld
ER -