A Return to Nation-Building Through Culture? The Past, Present and Futures of Australian Cultural Policy

The Australian National Cultural Policy titled Revive, was released by the Albanese Labor Government in January 2023. The policy is marked by elements of both continuity and change in terms of Australian cultural policy. It claims cultural policy to be a uniquely Labor initiative, building on a meta...

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Main Author: Flew, Terry
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: Media and Communication 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2123/31597
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spelling ftunivsydney:oai:ses.library.usyd.edu.au:2123/31597 2023-09-26T15:17:53+02:00 A Return to Nation-Building Through Culture? The Past, Present and Futures of Australian Cultural Policy Flew, Terry 2023-08-23 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/2123/31597 en eng Media and Communication Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, School of Art, Communication and English https://hdl.handle.net/2123/31597 Other cultural policy nation-building creative industries artists as workers cultural labour First Nations ANZSRC FoR code::47 LANGUAGE COMMUNICATION AND CULTURE::4701 Communication and media studies COMMUNICATION AND CULTURE::4702 Cultural studies::470201 Arts and cultural policy Preprint 2023 ftunivsydney 2023-08-28T22:25:08Z The Australian National Cultural Policy titled Revive, was released by the Albanese Labor Government in January 2023. The policy is marked by elements of both continuity and change in terms of Australian cultural policy. It claims cultural policy to be a uniquely Labor initiative, building on a meta-narrative that associates Labor government since Gough Whitlam with an agenda of globalisation and modernisation in which state-supported arts and culture is seen as having a distinctive nation-building role. At the same time, the policy is marked by a relative downplaying of the creative industries agenda emphasising the economic contribution of culture, and a stronger focus on artists as workers and the precarious nature of cultural employment. It also links cultural policy strongly to First Nations aspirations, particularly around greater control over decisions that affect First Nations people in the arts and culture. Report First Nations The University of Sydney: Sydney eScholarship Repository Gough ENVELOPE(159.367,159.367,-81.633,-81.633)
institution Open Polar
collection The University of Sydney: Sydney eScholarship Repository
op_collection_id ftunivsydney
language English
topic cultural policy
nation-building
creative industries
artists as workers
cultural labour
First Nations
ANZSRC FoR code::47 LANGUAGE
COMMUNICATION AND CULTURE::4701 Communication and media studies
COMMUNICATION AND CULTURE::4702 Cultural studies::470201 Arts and cultural policy
spellingShingle cultural policy
nation-building
creative industries
artists as workers
cultural labour
First Nations
ANZSRC FoR code::47 LANGUAGE
COMMUNICATION AND CULTURE::4701 Communication and media studies
COMMUNICATION AND CULTURE::4702 Cultural studies::470201 Arts and cultural policy
Flew, Terry
A Return to Nation-Building Through Culture? The Past, Present and Futures of Australian Cultural Policy
topic_facet cultural policy
nation-building
creative industries
artists as workers
cultural labour
First Nations
ANZSRC FoR code::47 LANGUAGE
COMMUNICATION AND CULTURE::4701 Communication and media studies
COMMUNICATION AND CULTURE::4702 Cultural studies::470201 Arts and cultural policy
description The Australian National Cultural Policy titled Revive, was released by the Albanese Labor Government in January 2023. The policy is marked by elements of both continuity and change in terms of Australian cultural policy. It claims cultural policy to be a uniquely Labor initiative, building on a meta-narrative that associates Labor government since Gough Whitlam with an agenda of globalisation and modernisation in which state-supported arts and culture is seen as having a distinctive nation-building role. At the same time, the policy is marked by a relative downplaying of the creative industries agenda emphasising the economic contribution of culture, and a stronger focus on artists as workers and the precarious nature of cultural employment. It also links cultural policy strongly to First Nations aspirations, particularly around greater control over decisions that affect First Nations people in the arts and culture.
format Report
author Flew, Terry
author_facet Flew, Terry
author_sort Flew, Terry
title A Return to Nation-Building Through Culture? The Past, Present and Futures of Australian Cultural Policy
title_short A Return to Nation-Building Through Culture? The Past, Present and Futures of Australian Cultural Policy
title_full A Return to Nation-Building Through Culture? The Past, Present and Futures of Australian Cultural Policy
title_fullStr A Return to Nation-Building Through Culture? The Past, Present and Futures of Australian Cultural Policy
title_full_unstemmed A Return to Nation-Building Through Culture? The Past, Present and Futures of Australian Cultural Policy
title_sort return to nation-building through culture? the past, present and futures of australian cultural policy
publisher Media and Communication
publishDate 2023
url https://hdl.handle.net/2123/31597
long_lat ENVELOPE(159.367,159.367,-81.633,-81.633)
geographic Gough
geographic_facet Gough
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation https://hdl.handle.net/2123/31597
op_rights Other
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