2014/2015 KAN-CSOCV1010U Creative and collective citizenship: Exploring the entrepreneurial city
English Title | |
Creative and collective citizenship: Exploring the entrepreneurial city |
Course information |
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Language | English |
Course ECTS | 7.5 ECTS |
Type | Elective |
Level | Full Degree Master |
Duration | One Quarter |
Course period | Fourth Quarter |
Timetable | Course schedule will be posted at calendar.cbs.dk |
Study board |
Study Board for MSc of Social Science
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Course coordinator | |
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Administrative contact: Karina Ravn Nielsen, 3815 3782, electives.mpp@cbs.dk | |
Main academic disciplines | |
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Last updated on 19-02-2014 |
Learning objectives | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Course prerequisites | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Full and active participation in the course is strongly recommended, including theoretical and methodological workshops and group fieldwork. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Examination | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Course content and structure | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
The twin notions of the creative city and the
entrepreneurial city have found their way into urban planning and
political agendas in many large cities across the globe in their
aspiration to become attractive and successful. As the British
Council puts it: “Creative Cities are successful cities. They
succeed culturally, economically, socially and environmentally.
They are good places to live: they attract talented people, who
attract investment and create jobs. By finding innovative solutions
to the problems such as crime, traffic congestion, they make life
better for citizens.“
Great cities have always been places of creativity, innovation and emancipation, yet in contemporary post-industrial cities, creativity and entrepreneurship are emphasized as the ‘heart’ of urban development. Consider, for instance, the stories and images of Berlin, Barcelona, Copenhagen, Manchester, and related ‘Creative Cities’. What constitutes a major shift is the substantial focus on urban cultural vitality - on sensual atmospheres and spectacles, on cultural heritage and consumption and on the image of the creative city. In this sense, Western cities currently seem to be observed, portrayed, and discussed more in terms of their cultural value than, traditionally, their industrial or political value. This development is mirrored in urban politics and design. Broadly put, the ‘functional city’ was the paradigm of city development into the 1970s, with industry, administration and functional organization as central themes. With the advent of deindustrialisation and the rise of the so-called postfordist economy, we have seen a wide-ranging culturalisation of urban development with culture, creativity, and entrepreneurship at its core. In simple terms, one could argue that the functional city equals the managerial city, while the creative city equals the entrepreneurial city. Accordingly, creating creative cities and attracting the ‘creative class’ is presented as the major task for today’s urban designers and developers. Yet, what does it actually mean to be(come) a creative city? Where and how do creativity and entrepreneurship happen? Can you plan, control, and domesticate creativity? These are central questions to this course. To look for creativity and urban entrepreneurship, we need to explore where the conceived space of planners, architects, and designers meet the spatial routines of living and working in the city, and where this conceived space and these spatial routines meet the ‘lived space’ of experimental use and appropriation. How are cities used and used differently? How are urban spaces appropriated and reorganized? How are urban practices performed and transformed? Exploring the entrepreneurial city also means broadening the understanding of entrepreneurship beyond economic rationales to include cultural, social, and environmental ones. Entrepreneurship, in this view, can be seen as a process “where people are invited to practice creative citizenship and to bring collectivity into the public space, the social is understood as collective investments in desiring images that are transformed in public spaces (..)”(Steyeart & Hjorth, 2006: 14). Examples of such initiatives could be public urban gardening projects, carpooling schemes, or ‘Poverty Walks’, where homeless people are giving guided tours to experience Copenhagen through their eyes. In this course, the city will therefore be looked at as a ‘potential space’ with surprising possibilities and perpetual uncertainties where creativity and entrepreneurship become realized. We will inquire how the ordering and organization of urban life is continuously forged and challenged and where new possibilities for work, citizenship, and lifestyle emerge. Students are asked to engage with the relevant theories, concepts, and opinions of urban creativity and entrepreneurship; and they are challenged to venture out into the city and encounter the urban everyday themselves, enacting stories of Copenhagen as a potential city. |
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Teaching methods | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
The course will consist of (brief) input lectures, text-based discussions (seminars), methodological trainings (workshop) and the students’ hands-on explorations (fieldwork). | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Expected literature | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Amin, A. and N. Thrift (2002) Cities:
Reimagining the Urban. Cambridge, UK: Polity Press.
Beyes, T. (2012) ‘Organizing the Entrepreneurial City’, in D. Hjorth (ed.) Handbook on Organisational Entrepreneurship (pp. 320-337). Cheltenham: Edward Elgar. Beyes, T., Krempl, S.-T.and A. Deuflhard (eds.) 2009 Parcitypate:Art and Urban Space. Zurich: Niggli. Cronin, M. and K. Hetherington (eds.) Consuming the Entrepreneurial City: Image, Memory, Spectacle. London: Routledge. Evans, G. (2009) ‘Creative Cities, Creative Spaces and Urban Policy’, Urban Studies 46(5&6): 1003-1040. Florida, R. (2002) The Rise of the Creative Class.Cambridge, MA: Basic Books. Harvey, D. (1989) ‘From Managerialism to Entrepreneurialism: The Transformation in Urban Governance in Late Capitalism’, Geografiska Annaler B 71(1): 3-17. Lefebvre, H. (1996) ‘Right to the City’, in E. Kofman and E. Lebas (eds.)Henri Lefebvre: Writings on Cities (pp. 63-184). Oxford: Blackwell. Pratt, A. C. (2008) ‘Creative cities: the cultural industries and the creative class’, Geografiska Annaler: Series B, Human Geography 90(2): 107-117. Zukin, S. (1995) The Culture of Cities. Oxford: Blackwell. |
Last updated on
19-02-2014