D. J. Carter’s scientific contributions

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Publications (4)


Australian Culture and its Publics
  • Article

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D. J. Carter

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Citations (1)


... The arts sector was resistant to the use of an 'industrial model' for several reasons including its implications for funding, expectations of arts activity, preference for quantitative evaluation measures, and the possibility of an increasing emphasis on bottom line expectations (Anderson 1992, Brook 1995, Brokensha 1996. However, other commentators saw an industry framing as a way to make the 'arts' more accessible by giving it a more democratic and less élitist context especially when it put the arts into a broader framing of the creative or cultural industries (Bennett 1993, Cunningham 1994, Bennet and Carter 2001. As the Labor Party was seen as the party of the trade unions and ordinary people, an industrial approach to the arts was seen as a way the Labor Party could embrace the arts rather than seeing them as the field of the privileged. ...

Reference:

Cultural wars in an Australian context: challenges in developing a national cultural policy
Culture in Australia: Policies, Publics and Programs
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