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Moving Convergence Cultures Beyond ‘Speculative Fiction’ to Grounded Experience: Embedded cultural research Jonathon Hutchinson University of Sydney @dhutchman

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Williams has noted the role of cultural studies is “the making of society” which “requires the finding of common meanings and direction” (Williams 1958: 93). Cultural studies as a (non) discipline has arguably spawned an array of emerging disciplines including the creative industries, which to some extent encompasses convergence cultures. Recent humanities scholarship has called for researchers to move beyond the marvel of convergence cultures as a form of cultural studies with its potential for increased social inclusion and cultural diversity, to a more nuanced understanding of participation. Participation in this instance may be mobilised by an increased capacity for economic or political gain, or, more likely, to satisfy the increase in the attention economy addressed through networked individualism. Given this provocation to extend our understanding of convergence culture beyond the “80 per cent speculative fiction” (Turner 2011) argument, scholars within the cultural studies discipline should be looking towards grounded approaches of audience participation within the media and communication sectors. The provocation also poses the question, is convergence culture an adequate framework to investigate the increasing political engagement alongside the increasing individualisation of mass communication? Jenkins (2013) recently commented, “cultural scholars from varied traditions have much to learn from each other if we can move past a history of internal culture wars and towards a more productive dialogue that balances critique and advocacy” (p 2). The data in this paper seeks to satisfy that balance through the findings of a three-year ethnographic research project that investigated participatory cultures at the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC), specifically ABC Pool (www.abc.net.au/pool). The data emerges from practice-based research and suggests participation does impact on greater democratic processes, however it is the work of the cultural intermediary that facilitates this process. Finally, this paper seeks to consolidate the convergence culture framework as a suitable approach to understand the broader policy and regulation disciplines.

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Page 1: Moving Convergence Culture Beyond ‘Speculative Fiction’ to Grounded Experience: Embedded cultural research

Moving Convergence Cultures Beyond ‘Speculative Fiction’ to Grounded Experience: Embedded cultural

research

Jonathon Hutchinson

University of Sydney

@dhutchman

Page 2: Moving Convergence Culture Beyond ‘Speculative Fiction’ to Grounded Experience: Embedded cultural research

Why?

• Perspectives of cultural studies• Historical rhetoric/debates• Highlight potential for embedded cultural

research• Case study – the ABC• Impact on the creative economy?

Page 3: Moving Convergence Culture Beyond ‘Speculative Fiction’ to Grounded Experience: Embedded cultural research

Cultural studies…

“the making of society” which “requires the finding of common meanings and direction”

(Williams 1958: 93).

Page 4: Moving Convergence Culture Beyond ‘Speculative Fiction’ to Grounded Experience: Embedded cultural research

Creative Industries

Page 5: Moving Convergence Culture Beyond ‘Speculative Fiction’ to Grounded Experience: Embedded cultural research

Convergence cultures

to investigate the impact of media and communication and the potential

democratising effects of greater participation

Page 6: Moving Convergence Culture Beyond ‘Speculative Fiction’ to Grounded Experience: Embedded cultural research

But…

“they have little in the way of an independent academic or intellectual agenda, but rather see

themselves as serving the demands of an industry that seems magically to have shed its

association with capital and become unproblematically identified with the people”

(Turner 2012: 95)

Page 7: Moving Convergence Culture Beyond ‘Speculative Fiction’ to Grounded Experience: Embedded cultural research

The need for empirical data, then?

Page 8: Moving Convergence Culture Beyond ‘Speculative Fiction’ to Grounded Experience: Embedded cultural research
Page 9: Moving Convergence Culture Beyond ‘Speculative Fiction’ to Grounded Experience: Embedded cultural research

The problem with participation

“One has to feel invited, com- mitted and/or empowered to enter into a participatory

process. But the presence of a participatory culture cannot be conflated with participation

itself and its logics of equal(ised) power relations” (Carpentier & Dahlgren 2009: 7)

Page 10: Moving Convergence Culture Beyond ‘Speculative Fiction’ to Grounded Experience: Embedded cultural research

Creative economy

In the recent UNCTAD Creative Economy report (2013), a call for the input between cultural

practice and local, national and regional governance policy has been expressed,

traditionally labelled ‘cultural policy’

Page 11: Moving Convergence Culture Beyond ‘Speculative Fiction’ to Grounded Experience: Embedded cultural research

Point of departure

Embedded cultural practice provides us with rich, qualitative research empirical data

This data in turn helps us to understand the cultural tapestry of states, nations & regions

This knowledge assists in creating highly nuanced policy and regulation

Page 12: Moving Convergence Culture Beyond ‘Speculative Fiction’ to Grounded Experience: Embedded cultural research

Thank you