ABSTRACT

Drawing on Australian and comparative case studies, this volume reconceptualises non-metropolitan creative economies through the ‘qualities of place’.

This book examines the agricultural and gastronomic cultures surrounding ‘native’ foods, coastal sculpture festivals, universities and regional communities, wine in regional Australia and Canada, the creative systems of the Hunter Valley, musicians in ‘outback’ settings, Fab Labs as alternatives to clusters, cinema and the cultivation of ‘authentic’ landscapes, and tensions between the ‘representational’ and ‘non-representational’ in the cultural economies of the Blue Mountains. What emerges is a picture of rural and regional places as more than the ‘other’ of metropolitan creative cities. Place itself is shown to embody affordances, unique institutional structures and the invisible threads that ‘hold communities together’.

If, in the wake of the publication of Florida’s Rise of the Creative Class, creative industries models tended to emphasize ‘big cities’ and the spatial-cum-cultural imaginaries of the ‘Global North’, recent research and policy discourses – especially, in the Australian context – have paid greater attention to ‘small cities’, rural and remote creativity. This collection will be of interest to scholars, students and practitioners in creative industries, urban and regional studies, sociology, geography and cultural planning.

chapter |17 pages

Introduction

Problematising regional creativity and innovation in Australia and beyond: landscapes, economies, identities, imaginaries

section Section 1|99 pages

Landscapes, tastescapes and sensescapes

chapter 1|24 pages

Fruit forward?

Wine regions as geographies of innovation in Australia and Canada

chapter 2|22 pages

There’s no taste like home

Histories of native food on the changing tastescape of the Northern Rivers

chapter 3|15 pages

Terraform and Terra Firma

Transnational economies of image, landscape and location in screen production in Queensland

chapter 4|20 pages

Landscape as tension

The Blue Mountains and cultural economies of place

chapter 5|16 pages

Deck-chair innovation

Innovation within arm’s reach for regional Australian architecture: A little of what we found when we rode the Grand Section across Australia’s girth in 2017

section Section 2|79 pages

Placing knowledge and innovation economies

chapter 6|21 pages

The troubling third tier

Small cities, small universities and an ambivalent knowledge economy

section Section 3|88 pages

Regional creative industries and their potentials

chapter 10|22 pages

The Hunter Region

A creative system at work

chapter 11|21 pages

“Anything that’s not in London”

Regions, mobility and spatial politics in contemporary visual art

chapter 12|15 pages

Sculptural coastlines

Site-specific artworks, beachscapes, and regional identities

chapter 13|11 pages

One piece blokes

On being a performing musician in regional Queensland

chapter 14|17 pages

Positive deviance

Stories of regional social innovations from the Big Stories, Small Towns project