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Amateur Creativity: Interdisciplinary Perspectives

 

A Two-Day International Symposium organised as part of the AHRC-funded project Amateur Dramatics: Crafting Communities in Time and Space (http://amateurdramaresearch.com/)

 

School of Theatre, Performance and Cultural Policy Studies

Millburn House, University of Warwick, UK

Thursday 17th - Friday 18th September 2015

You are warmly invited to attend this two-day symposium on amateur creativity, which will include research presentations from a number of fields including cultural geography, film, media, cultural policy, dance, theatre and visual culture from a range of historical and international perspectives.

Amateur creativity is enjoying renewed vitality in the twenty-first century, reflecting deep cultural changes. Amateur performers, critics, authors and musicians can reach global audiences through blogs, youtube, ebooks and many other forms of social media, a cultural practice set to increase as digital technology becomes increasingly accessible. There is a revival of interest in folk art and craft, with some amateur bakers, knitters and gardeners becoming TV celebrities and others turning their skills to guerrilla performance, slow art or political activism. Organisations that have long supported amateur creativity, such as the Women’s Institute, The National Allotment Society, The Embroiders Guild and National Operatic and Dramatic Society are thriving, with many gaining new and younger members. Diasporic communities often maintain links with the cultural traditions and heritage of ‘home’ through craft and different forms of performance, many of which exist outside the boundaries associated with professional activity in the West. Amateur creativity in the twenty-first century is redefining what it means to be a professional, with profound cultural consequences.

In the academy there is a resurgence of interest in amateur creativity, regarded as a vital alternative to the commodified creative industries and to forms of cultural practice that reflect only the tastes of the metropolitan élite. At the same time, the parameters of professional researcher are becoming porous, as amateur researchers are encouraged to gather data, shape research agendas and become co-producers of knowledge. The twenty-first century is set to loosen the idea of amateurism from its association with the ‘unprofessional’, and to reassert the significance of amateur creativity to communities, individuals and the wider ecologies of cultural participation.

This inter-disciplinary symposium aims to challenge perceptions of amateur creativity and contribute to debates about the cultural significance of the amateur through a consideration of key themes including: the boundaries between the amateur and professional, everyday creativity, methodological issues, amateur creativity and craft, amateur creativity and subjectivity, making spaces for creativity and the histories and heritage of amateur creativity.

There is no registration fee for this symposium and lunches/refreshments will be provided, however, delegates will be asked to arrange and cover their own travel and accommodation. Please note that the nearest train station to the campus is in Coventry.

If you have any questions regarding the symposium please contact Nadine Holdsworth at: amateursymposium@warwick.ac.uk

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