The Cultural Economy of Cities: Essays on the Geography of Image-Producing Industries

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SAGE, Nov 13, 2000 - Business & Economics - 245 pages
Culture is big business. It is at the root of many urban regeneration schemes throughout the world, yet the economy of culture is under-theorized and under-developed.

In this wide-ranging and penetrating volume, the economic logic and structure of the modern cultural industries is explained. The connection between cultural production and urban-industrial concentration is demonstrated and the book shows why global cities are the homelands of the modern cultural industries. This book covers many sectors of cultural economy, from craft industries such as clothing and furniture, to modern media industries such as cinema and music recording.

The role of the global city as a source of creative and innovative en

 

Contents

3
21
COLLECTIVE ORDER
40
Decline
60
7
88
The Recorded Music Industry in the United States
113
9
119
Multimedia and Digital Visual Effects Workers in Southern
155
LOS ANGELES AND PARIS
170
Tradition and Change
193
CODA
203
References
217
188
230
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About the author (2000)

As part of the group of geographers trained at Northwestern University in the 1960s, Allen J. Scott helped lead the quantitative movement. His use of mathematical models in spatial allocation analysis was well received. Now as professor of geography at the University of California in Los Angeles, Scott has, over the past two decades, helped define a new geography that combines rigorous statistical methods with efforts to develop broader social theory. His work on modern industrial location has been highly influential to a new generation of urban, economic, and political geographers.