The Times Australia
The Times World News

.
The Times Real Estate

.

Revive reflects global trends in policy – cultural and otherwise

  • Written by Justin O'Connor, Professor of Cultural Economy, University of South Australia

Federal Labor is engaged in urgent reform, making up for the “lost decade” under the Coalition. The Voice, industrial relations, climate change, universities, health, Asian-Pacific diplomacy, research and development are all undergoing significant policy review. We can now add the new National Cultural Policy, dubbed Revive[1].

The reference points since the launch of the policy have been Whitlam and Keating, both for their reforming energies and their love of the arts. But it is worth putting this into an international context.

Australia’s lack of a cultural policy was often seen as a throwback to some philistine past, provoking a toe-curling culture cringe at the thought of how this might look overseas. But the Coalition was in fact adopting a right-wing politics that began with the mid-1990s US Republican Party[2], then picked up in the United Kingdom, across the European Union and beyond.

If party lines in culture were string quartets versus some pop-modernism combo, the new conservative dispensation was happy to reject art.

In doing this they could pose as populists, setting the huddled masses of the suburbs against the metropolitan elites.

Read more: 'Arts are meant to be at the heart of our life': what the new national cultural policy could mean for Australia – if it all comes together[3]

A creative nation

Labor’s new cultural policy harks back to the ill-fated 2013 Creative Australia[4] and to 1994’s fondly remembered Creative Nation[5].

Creative Nation set an international benchmark for a new kind of cultural policy thinking, embracing commercial popular culture alongside the arts. This combination was seized upon by UK New Labour for its creative industries rebranding in 1998[6].

Flagging by the time Conservatives got back into power in 2010, the whole idea was briefly revived after Brexit.

The head of the UK Arts Council, Peter Bazalgette, got creative industries inserted into Theresa May’s 2017 industrial policy, and the British Council actively courted China as a growth non-EU market. “Getting Brexit done” and the pandemic put an end to all this[7].

In 2013, still in the post-financial crisis doldrums, Creative Australia was a policy wonk document with little to set the blood racing.

Revive addresses a cultural sector that feels battered and unloved with grace and aplomb. The arts are essential to a democratic society, and they are for everyone.

Tony Burke
Arts minister Tony Burke launched the new cultural policy last week. AAP Image/James Ross

First Nations First is the most significant new addition, marking where we have moved even in a decade.

There is money, not transformative[8] but significant[9], and a set of new agencies. The absence of economic justification stands out, as does the way creative industries has dropped out of the big picture rhetoric.

A story for every place, not jobs and growth.

This too reflects a global trend. Jim Chalmers’ essay in The Monthly[10] placed the nation squarely at the heart of a post-neoliberal world.

Investment in health, education and social services, along with the green transition, will require a more active, even entrepreneurial state.

This is of a piece with the post-pandemic centre-left, from US President Joe Biden[11] and his French counterpart Emmanuel Macron[12], to UK Labour leader Keir Starmer[13] and the German Greens[14].

In Europe these “green new deals” have come with promises of greater funding for culture, other than in those with a strong right-wing contingent such as Italy, Sweden and many former Eastern bloc countries. In the austerity-headed UK cultural funding[15] is set to be cut, while the US is talking about rejoining UNESCO[16].

Read more: Humanising capitalism: Jim Chalmers designs a new version of an old Labor project[17]

Facing inequalities

In September 2022 UNESCO, the UN’s lead body on culture, held a cultural policy conference[18] in Mexico City. They saw a world marked by:

climate change and biodiversity loss, armed conflicts, natural hazards, uncontrolled urbanisation, unsustainable development patterns, as well as the erosion of democratic societies – [leading] to an increase in poverty, inequalities in the exercise of rights and a growing divide in access to digital technologies.

This is no longer the exciting, globalised marketplace in which a dynamic creative economy was going to float all boats. The new vision was “culture as a global public good” and for the UN to pursue a cultural goal in addition to the 17 Sustainable Development Goals[19] adopted in 2015.

The next steps for UNESCO are not clear. “Global public goods” can mean a commitment to a revived and robust public culture, or to the kind of state-led investment in skills, infrastructure and accessible finance that has underpinned the global creative industries policy script for two decades.

Revive’s visionary talk is about art and storytelling, connection to country and culture, but the rebranded Australia Council, Creative Australia, is straight out of the neoliberal playbook.

Creative Australia has an expanded remit to engage with the commercial and philanthropic sector, just as Chalmers sees an expanded social services delivered by ethically motivated “impact investors”. The grounds on which this enlargement will take place are not addressed, although chief executive Mark Collette was very enthusiastic about creative industries in the post-launch Australia Council seminar.

The first step

The cultural sector long abandoned the utopian promise of creative hubs and Macbook-driven start-ups.

Rather than creative entrepreneurship, workers in the sector are now talking about co-operatives[20], unionisation, gig worker platforms[21] and other forms of collective organising. The pandemic radically shifted debates on the social function of culture and the welfare of artists in East Asia[22].

The new Centre for Arts and Entertainment Workplaces[23] looks set to be a site of contest, as the reality of exploitation in both the subsidised and commercial sector is given a new visibility.

The curtain has been drawn on neoliberalism but, as economist John Quiggin[24] made us all aware, its zombie form still lives on.

Revive is the first step into a new global landscape for which we barely have a language. This has to come not from government but from those working in the cultural sector itself.

Read more: Pay, safety and welfare: how the new Centre for Arts and Entertainment Workplaces can strengthen the arts sector[25]

References

  1. ^ dubbed Revive (www.hawkerbritton.com)
  2. ^ mid-1990s US Republican Party (www.griffithreview.com)
  3. ^ 'Arts are meant to be at the heart of our life': what the new national cultural policy could mean for Australia – if it all comes together (theconversation.com)
  4. ^ Creative Australia (www.arts.gov.au)
  5. ^ Creative Nation (theconversation.com)
  6. ^ rebranding in 1998 (www.tandfonline.com)
  7. ^ put an end to all this (www.theguardian.com)
  8. ^ transformative (theconversation.com)
  9. ^ significant (www.crikey.com.au)
  10. ^ The Monthly (www.themonthly.com.au)
  11. ^ US President Joe Biden (www.theguardian.com)
  12. ^ French counterpart Emmanuel Macron (www.diplomatie.gouv.fr)
  13. ^ UK Labour leader Keir Starmer (www.theguardian.com)
  14. ^ German Greens (www.tatsachen-ueber-deutschland.de)
  15. ^ cultural funding (www.theguardian.com)
  16. ^ talking about rejoining UNESCO (www.theartnewspaper.com)
  17. ^ Humanising capitalism: Jim Chalmers designs a new version of an old Labor project (theconversation.com)
  18. ^ cultural policy conference (www.unesco.org)
  19. ^ Sustainable Development Goals (sdgs.un.org)
  20. ^ co-operatives (www.tandfonline.com)
  21. ^ gig worker platforms (www.smart.coop)
  22. ^ welfare of artists in East Asia (www.tandfonline.com)
  23. ^ Centre for Arts and Entertainment Workplaces (theconversation.com)
  24. ^ John Quiggin (www.blackincbooks.com.au)
  25. ^ Pay, safety and welfare: how the new Centre for Arts and Entertainment Workplaces can strengthen the arts sector (theconversation.com)

Read more https://theconversation.com/a-story-for-every-place-not-jobs-and-growth-revive-reflects-global-trends-in-policy-cultural-and-otherwise-198871

The Times Features

From Home Kitchen to Coles: Ballarat Food Startup Makes Middle Eastern Cooking Easy

Exotic Bazaar brings regional innovation and migrant entrepreneurship to supermarket shelves A Ballarat-based food startup is celebrating a major milestone after Coles picked up i...

An Introduction to Complete Hip Replacement Surgery

Hip replacement or total hip arthroplasty is a relatively common medical procedure to regain mobility and bring an end to incessant pain in victims of extreme pain in the hip joi...

2 in 3 Melbourne Families Are Downsizing—But Not for the Reason You Think, Says Big Stuff Movers

MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA — [16-05-25] — In a city known for its vibrant culture and sprawling suburbs, a quiet revolution is underway. According to recent internal data from Big Stuf...

Runway With a Hug: Gary Bigeni’s Colourful Comeback

By Cesar Ocampo Photographer | AFW 2025 Some designers you photograph once, admire from afar, and move on. But others — like Gary Bigeni — pull you in and never let go. Not becaus...

Tassie’s best pie enters NSW with the launch National Pies’ new fresh range

Fresh from Tasmanian Bakeries in Hobart, National Pies has just delivered Tassie’s best-selling pie to the ready meals aisles of Woolworths stores across NSW.  The delicious roll o...

IORDANES SPYRIDON GOGOS RUNWAY | AFW 2025

Fifth Collection by ISG | Words + Photography by Cesar Ocampo Some runway shows are about the clothes. Others are about the culture they carry. With Iordanes Spyridon Gogos, it’s ...

Times Magazine

Senior of the Year Nominations Open

The Allan Labor Government is encouraging all Victorians to recognise the valuable contributions of older members of our community by nominating them for the 2025 Victorian Senior of the Year Awards.  Minister for Ageing Ingrid Stitt today annou...

CNC Machining Meets Stage Design - Black Swan State Theatre Company & Tommotek

When artistry meets precision engineering, incredible things happen. That’s exactly what unfolded when Tommotek worked alongside the Black Swan State Theatre Company on several of their innovative stage productions. With tight deadlines and intrica...

Uniden Baby Video Monitor Review

Uniden has released another award-winning product as part of their ‘Baby Watch’ series. The BW4501 Baby Monitor is an easy to use camera for keeping eyes and ears on your little one. The camera is easy to set up and can be mounted to the wall or a...

Top Benefits of Hiring Commercial Electricians for Your Business

When it comes to business success, there are no two ways about it: qualified professionals are critical. While many specialists are needed, commercial electricians are among the most important to have on hand. They are directly involved in upholdin...

The Essential Guide to Transforming Office Spaces for Maximum Efficiency

Why Office Fitouts MatterA well-designed office can make all the difference in productivity, employee satisfaction, and client impressions. Businesses of all sizes are investing in updated office spaces to create environments that foster collaborat...

The A/B Testing Revolution: How AI Optimized Landing Pages Without Human Input

A/B testing was always integral to the web-based marketing world. Was there a button that converted better? Marketing could pit one against the other and see which option worked better. This was always through human observation, and over time, as d...

LayBy Shopping