Exploring social creativity in place-making: A case study from a coastal town in Northern Norway
The purpose of the article is to explore the relationship between place-making and social creativity. It isgrounded in a single case study and an analytical generalization approach to the study of two projectsin the town of Vardø, Norway: Vardø Restored and Biotope. Empirical data are presented as t...
Published in: | Norsk Geografisk Tidsskrift - Norwegian Journal of Geography |
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Format: | Article in Journal/Newspaper |
Language: | English |
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2020
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Online Access: | https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2658449 https://doi.org/10.1080/00291951.2020.1716844 |
Summary: | The purpose of the article is to explore the relationship between place-making and social creativity. It isgrounded in a single case study and an analytical generalization approach to the study of two projectsin the town of Vardø, Norway: Vardø Restored and Biotope. Empirical data are presented as thematicstories in becoming, which are discussed using actor–network theory (ANT) and meshwork-inspiredanalysis. Social creativity is understood as inhabitants’ability to meet new challenges with creativity.Place-making is understood in terms of place-specific creative and regenerative processes, with afocus on the role of community entrepreneurs and creative community arenas outside the formalplanning system. Importantfindings suggest that social creativity emerges from communityactivities, in which multiple individuals and actors play important roles. Through these processes,entrepreneurs become community entrepreneurs whentheir collective orientations are activated.Individual community entrepreneurs can take active roles in stimulating social creativity based ontheir place-specific commitments, broad value-creation perspectives, and sensitivity to place-specificcomplexities, as well as by gaining credibility. The author concludes that creative community arenasfor direct encounters between many different lifelines and actors, future motives, and collectiveactions are fundamental for the emergence of social creativity and place-making dynamics. publishedVersion |
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