Creative Industries from Gold to Lead: A Review of Robert Hewison?s ?Cultural 
Capital?

1. Where have all the Critics gone?
Since their inception in the late 1990s by Tony Blair?s New Labour government, 
creative industries policies have spread throughout the continent. The creative 
industries approach is increasingly becoming a mainstream tool for policy 
makers at all levels, from the funding schemes of the European Union and the 
various national agendas, down to the administrative capillaries of regional 
and local policy. One might think that the process of establishing the creative 
industries as a policy field would have been accompanied by a critical and 
constructive discussion about the approaches, instruments, and indeed, the 
general direction creative industries were taking over the course of the past 
fifteen years. If it is true, as the pundits don?t tire to tell us, that 
creative industries policies are a reflection of massive social, economic and 
cultural transformations, then surely no one expects policy makers, pioneers 
and first-movers to get everything right the first time around. New policie
 s, after all, need rigorous critique in order to improve. Success or failure 
of the creative transformation of our economies and societies depend for a 
large part on learning from one?s mistakes. So far, however, this is hardly 
happening.

True, over the past few years, we have seen are a number of publications that 
critically engage with the rise of ?creativity? to the centre stage of policy 
making. Books such as Gerald Raunig?s Critique of Creativity, Andreas 
Reckwitz?s Erfindung der Kreativit?t, or the INC?s own MyCreativity Reader made 
valuable contributions challenging the cynical vacuity the discourse on 
creativity and its industry increasingly acquired. However, while these and 
similar publications often put forward important arguments against political 
and economic functionalizations of art and culture, they tended to remain at a 
level of theoretical abstraction that was incompatible with the discourses 
happening around the realpolitik of the creative industries. The Brits 
themselves proved to be active commentators on their own policy invention as 
well. James Heartfield?s early Creative Gap, Guardian economists Larry Elliot 
and Dan Atkinson?s entertaining polemic Fantasy Island and Owen Hatherley?s 
Guide to th
 e New Ruins of Great Britain are examples for a very critical engagement with 
different aspects of creative industries policy. And one should not, of course, 
forget geographer renegade Jamie Peck?s tireless attacks on Richard Florida and 
the urban policies his theses instigated.

Yet, those involved in the construction of the new policy field in Britain and 
elsewhere did not seem all too keen to engage in a critical discussion of their 
practice anyway. The idea of intercity or interregional competition, which is 
at the heart of the creative industries paradigm, did not help spread a 
critical ethos among public institutions. Always wary of one?s brand value 
vis-?-vis supposed competitors, creative industries officials prefer to work 
with docile consultants and professional researchers who deliver the expected 
positive outlook. At the same time, universities have a hard time adjusting 
their programs to the interdisciplinary challenges that come with the new 
topologies of creative labour and entrepreneurship. Increasingly commercialized 
funding structures, often under the aegis of creative industries policies 
themselves, don?t help to spread a critical ethos either. Which puts us in the 
unfortunate situation of having a newly established policy field without bei
 ng able to properly assess it.

2. Cultural Capital
Given this regrettable state of affairs, the publication of Robert Hewison?s 
new book Cultural Capital: The Rise and Fall of Creative Britain is a very 
fortunate event. It is a comprehensive account of the complex motivations and 
processes that led to the invention of the creative industries out of the 
spirit of New Labour (which, it should be noted, took a page or two from 
Australia's Creative Nation policy) and its further development under the 
current conservative-liberal coalition government.  As the title indicates, 
this is a book about cultural capital, and more specifically, the changing 
political attitude towards culture and the arts. The author doesn?t have much 
to say on the structural transformation of production or the changing nature of 
labour ? themes that are often associated with the notion of the creative 
industries ? but focuses instead on the question of how, within the new 
paradigm of the creative industries, cultural capital became an instrument of 
social and eco
 nomic policy.

Hewison understands cultural capital in refreshingly non-Bourdieusian terms as 
a form of wealth or value that, although it can be enjoyed individually, ?is a 
mutual creation that uses the resources of shared traditions and the collective 
imagination to generate a public, not a private, good.? However, creative 
industries policy approaches cultural capital and its articulations in the 
cultural and artistic sector in rather different terms. As the author shows, 
the emergence of the creative industries paradigm marks a transformation in the 
policy toward culture and the arts that ?seeks to privatize this shared wealth, 
absorbing it into the circulation of commodities, and putting it to 
instrumental use.? For Hewison, this signals a shift in policy orientation 
toward a rigorous understanding of culture in terms of cultural capitalism. His 
book presents a fairly chronological analysis of this shift from the 
double-edged ?golden age? of New Labour to the brutal reality of the current 
?age 
 of lead.?

His account of events is based on what is usually called ?grey literature?, 
i.e., policy documents and reports, together with academic and ?expert? 
commentaries as well as his own observations of events. It is particularly the 
fervour and meticulousness of the latter that give the book its extraordinary 
quality. Hewison has indeed spent a lot of time ploughing through the grey 
stuff and he doesn?t hold back sharing what he?s found there.

3. Cool Britannia's Backstage
Most of the book reads like a case study of third way modernization through the 
lens of the arts and culture policy. After a revealing discussion of the 
ideological and political force field in which New Labour?s position on culture 
and the arts emerged, Hewison takes us, as it were, to the backstage of ?Cool 
Britannia.? As he ushers us through the transformation of the Department of 
National Heritage into the Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS), the 
restructuring of the Arts Council, the formation of new agencies such as NESTA, 
the appointment of task forces, the reallocation of budgets and so on, the 
mechanics of Labour?s creative industries policy become palpable. It also helps 
that the author embeds his policy analysis in a review of the artistic and 
cultural phenomena that defined ?Cool Britannia? such as the Young British 
Artists and Britpop.

Although the flood of names of relevant players, their backgrounds and 
positions, institutions, manifestos, committees, speeches, budget numbers etc. 
can be a bit overwhelming to the uninitiated, it also gives the reader the 
feeling of getting an almost unfiltered account of what ?really happened?. What 
did in fact happen was the introduction of the so-called ?New Public 
Management? which meant that ?the discipline and values of the market were 
applied to the formerly impersonal, politically and socially neutral, world of 
public service.? The whole of government ? and with it the government of 
culture and the arts ? would be restructured along the lines of business 
practice, or rather, its governmental simulation.

Fundamental for this process was the assumption that culture not only meant 
something to the economy but in fact should be seen as one of its drivers. The 
positive effect of the idea that ?culture creates wealth? was that under New 
Labour?s rule between 1997 and 2010, government spending on the arts nearly 
doubled. The entry charges to all national museums and galleries were removed, 
raising the annual number of visits from twenty four million to forty million. 
Generally speaking, Britain?s cultural infrastructure was improved not least 
thanks to the National Lottery?s transformation into an engine of urban 
regeneration. The film industry was flourishing, regional theatres, the Royal 
Shakespeare Company and the National Theatre were rejuvenated and had great 
visitors? numbers.

Yet, all this came at a price. While the idea of culture driving the economy 
provided a great argument for increasing arts funding, it also meant that 
cultural policy became besieged on two fronts: on the one hand the logic of the 
market, that increasingly saw cultural policy as an extension of economic 
policy; on the other hand the instrumentalization of arts and culture in the 
government?s quests for ?diversity? and against social exclusion. Both were 
articulations of New Labour?s populist third way renovation while in many ways 
also continuing Thatcherite ideologies (entrepreneurship, etc.) as well as 
anticipating Cameron?s euphemistic ?Big Society.? As Hewison summarizes this 
highly ambivalent development: ?culture became more ?democratic?, but the 
democracy was the unequal democracy of the marketplace.?

4. Creative (De-)Construction
One of the areas in which the creative industries approach was first put to the 
test was urban regeneration through culture and the arts. Cultural Capital 
discusses many cases of the cultural landmark approach, i.e., the erection of 
?iconic? buildings for the purpose of strengthening local identity and 
attracting investment. London?s Tate Modern, of course, was one of the great 
successes of this approach, turning Southwark ? previously one of the ten most 
deprived boroughs in the country ? into a thriving district. While this seemed 
to display ?the economic magic that cultural investment could make? it proved 
to be the exception rather than the rule. Particularly for Midland and Northern 
cities, the attempt to solve structural social and economic problems by way of 
cultural infrastructure investment turned out to be ambivalent at best. Not all 
the projects failed as spectacularly as the West Bromwich art centre The Public 
(cost: ?72 million; life span: 4,5 years) but they left a trai
 l of shameful early closures, fantastic time and cost overruns and other 
embarrassments. Obviously, continental Europe too has its share of failed 
cultural infrastructure projects but it is very helpful to be reminded that 
these were not necessarily failed transmissions of an originally well-working 
concept but that the concept per se was dysfunctional.

The chronological start and end point of Hewison?s journey through Creative 
Britain are two massive infrastructure projects as well. He takes off from the 
Millennium Dome ? a fiasco of its own league that very early on and very 
clearly showed the catastrophic failure of New Labour?s new public management ? 
in order to arrive at the Olympic games. Perhaps surprisingly, it is in Danny 
Boyle?s opening ceremony of the Olympics that Hewison detects the fullest 
articulation of Creative Britain. The projection of a creative, inclusive and 
dynamic ?Britain of the people? that the artistic trio around Boyle created in 
their great show expressed with unprecedented vividness the beauty and 
ambivalence of New Labour?s vision on cultural capitalism. ?Britannia found her 
Cool,? as the author puts it, in the aestheticized populism of everything that 
is great about Britain. And although Hewison has no illusions as to the 
?crimes? that have been committed in the context of the Olympics and its cultur
 al satellite the Olympiad in terms of budget reallocation, gentrification or 
the privatization of public space, he shows quite a bit of affection for the 
moment when the spectacle conveying what creative Britain could have been took 
the world?s centre stage. Ironically, it was also the moment when in Britain 
and other European countries doom was starting to descend on the cultural 
sector.

5. Lessons from Britain
There are many lessons to be taken from Robert Hewison?s book. Obviously, he 
has done us a great favour in documenting the deep ambivalences of creative 
industries policies in the country that is responsible for their invention. 
What continental Europe can learn from the British experience is that economic 
and social lead objectives and targets make neither for sensible nor effective 
instruments in the area of cultural policy. With regard to the DCMS?s perhaps 
most important lead objectives ? social inclusion and audience diversity ? the 
numbers of even the most celebratory reports remain underwhelming. The same 
applies to attempts at using cultural investment for the sake of economic 
development. There is, of course, a relation between culture and the economy 
but, a least with regard to the area of traditionally subsidized culture and 
the arts Hewison talks about, it is much less linear than policy makers like to 
assume. As the author puts it succinctly in his conclusion:

?The conversion of culture into an instrument of social and economic policy has 
changed what should be an offering into a requirement, and a response into an 
obligation. But creativity cannot be commanded, any more than its consequences 
can be predicted. Creativity depends on taking risks; the corollary is that the 
risk-taker must be trusted to understand the risk being taken. Everything that 
was done by New Labour to tie the arts and heritage into an instrumental agenda 
limited the creativity that it sought to encourage.?

Hewison?s work reveals a crucial mistake at the heart of creative industries 
policy: that the increasingly aesthetic, immaterial and cultural character of 
economic goods and services would make it sensible to regard culture and the 
arts primarily in terms of their economic value. This, of course, is not only 
neoliberal, it?s also plain wrong. The incapability to distinguish between 
culture as capital (market) and culture as value (public realm) has caused a 
most regrettable policy confusion within the field of creative industries. And 
while the international cast of incompetent policy makers along with their 
experts and consultants carry some responsibility for the obstinacy with which 
this policy nonsense is perpetuated, the award for instigating this confusion 
goes to New Labour?s ideologists. It might be interesting to note in this 
context, that the very same confused thinkers who are responsible for the 
creation of the conceptual mess ?creative industries? have since moved on to 
 repeat their questionable magic on new policy shores. Geoff Mulgan and Charles 
Leadbeater, two figures who played extremely crucial roles in formulating 
creative industries ?thinking? in Britain have become prominent visionaries 
(and in the case of Mulgan indeed an institutionalized leader) of the so-called 
social innovation movement. This is not, of course, the place to make a case 
against the absurd and ill-conceived notion of social innovation. However, as 
this newly emerging policy field is now spreading throughout the continent in a 
fashion similar to its creative predecessor, perhaps we can also read Hewison?s 
book as a warning against the uncritical imitation of British policy fashions.

Be that as it may. Robert Hewison has given us an empirically rich, 
relentlessly researched and impeccably argued critique of cultural policy under 
the aegis of the creative industries paradigm. Treating culture in terms of 
capital has failed ? many of us have known this for a long time but now there 
is a book that proves this point with regard to the motherland of the creative 
industries. I am hopeful Robert Hewison?s Cultural Capital: The Rise and Fall 
of Creative Britain will instigate the critical debate on cultural policy and 
creative industries that is needed today more than ever.

 
Robert Hewison will deliver his talk "Why the Creative Industries do not exist 
(but need to be invented)" at our MyCreativity Sweatshop, 20-21 November 2014, 
@TrouwAmsterdam.


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