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"What was "Creative Britain"? Was it the "golden age" that Tony Blair vaunted in 2007, or a neoliberal nirvana? In the twenty-first century, culture--the visual and performing arts, museums and galleries, the creative industries--have become ever more important to governments, to the economy, and to how people live. Cultural historian Robert Hewison shows how, from Cool Britannia and the Millennium Dome to the Olympics and beyond, Creative Britain rose from the desert of Thatcherism only to fall into the slough of New Labour's managerialism"--
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Subjects
Arts and society, History, Civilization, ART / History / Contemporary (1945-), POLITICAL SCIENCE / Public Policy / Cultural Policy, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Social Classes, Great britain, civilization, ART, Contemporary (1945- ), POLITICAL SCIENCE, Public Policy, Cultural Policy, SOCIAL SCIENCE, Social ClassesPlaces
Great BritainTimes
20th century, 21st century, 1945-Edition | Availability |
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1
Cultural capital: the rise and fall of creative Britain
2014, Verso
in English
1781685916 9781781685914
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Table of Contents
Introduction: 'A Golden Age'
Under New Public Management
Cool Britannia
'The Many Not Just the Few'
The Amoeba-and Its Offspring
'To Hell with Targets'
The Age of Lead
Olympic Rings
Just the Few, Not the Many
Conclusion : What Next?
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