Creativity and the Global Knowledge Economy

Understanding the intersections of creativity, design, and knowledge

Peter Murphy author Simon Marginson author Michael Adrian Peters author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Peter Lang Publishing Inc

Published:30th Dec '08

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Creativity and the Global Knowledge Economy cover

This insightful book explores the intricate connections between creativity, design, and knowledge capitalism, highlighting the evolution of the creative economy.

In Creativity and the Global Knowledge Economy, three distinguished scholars delve into the intricate relationships between creativity, design, research, and the evolving landscape of higher education within the framework of knowledge capitalism. The authors emphasize the pivotal role that the creative and expressive arts play, alongside performance and aesthetics, in shaping the infrastructure of the creative economy. This exploration reveals how these elements are interwoven with the dynamics of contemporary economic shifts, highlighting the importance of design as a foundational component of this transformation.

The book tracks the evolution from the postindustrial economy through various stages, including the information, digital, and knowledge economies, ultimately leading to the emergence of the 'creative economy.' This comprehensive analysis not only summarizes the essential trends in knowledge capitalism but also investigates the implications of open-source public spaces in a post-market context. The authors propose that the creative economy represents an expansion of previous economic models, potentially democratizing creativity and challenging traditional notions of intellectual property.

By documenting these significant changes, Creativity and the Global Knowledge Economy illustrates how new forms of knowledge production are emerging, driven by communal ideas rather than mere profitability. The text advocates for the design of 'creative institutions' that reflect these new work patterns, emphasizing the social conditions that accompany creative endeavors. Through this lens, the book offers a thought-provoking perspective on the future of creativity and its role in shaping society.

«‘Creativity and the Global Knowledge Economy’ is an important work of intellectual synthesis as well as a significantly original contribution to the global conversation about the contemporary economic and social significance of knowledge. The authors address key practical questions of the changing role of knowledge in the so-called post-industrial society. They also critically interrogate the rhetoric of the knowledge economy. This book is a comprehensive overview of the origins of the key debates, and at the same time sets an exciting agenda for future lines of discussion and action.» (Bill Cope, Research Professor, Department of Educational Policy Studies, College of Education, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign)
«This insightful and engaging book addresses questions of pressing significance for educationists in the twenty-first century. Peters, Marginson and Murphy provide a perceptive, well-argued account of economic, political and intellectual changes under global knowledge capitalism. They highlight the importance of creativity, imagination and education in the growth and ongoing development of knowledge societies. In these uncertain times, thoughtful, rigorous analysis of the kind demonstrated in this volume is much needed. ‘Creativity and the Global Knowledge Economy’ looks to the future while acknowledging the past. This book makes a valuable contribution to this growing field of research and deserves wide reading.» (Peter Roberts, Professor of Education, University of Canterbury, New Zealand)
«This is first-rate social science. Often there is a huge chasm between the prophets of the ‘new’ and the critics who want to puncture holes in their inflated claims, between social theorists spinning new concepts for understanding changes in economy, society and culture and social scientists who want to demonstrate that these zeitgeist-definers lack empirical depth or that their claims apply to only the few. This book cuts through those kinds of limiting debates by showing that the notion of a ‘global knowledge economy’ points to something real but that the term nonetheless requires unpacking and contextualization. Peters, Marginson and Murphy feel equally at home in the analytical world of Austrian economics or the sociology of post-industrialism, the discipline of management or the study of higher education, a discussion of creativity or the Web 2.0 system. They provide a material and institutional context for the ideas surrounding the ‘global knowledge economy’ and identify key carriers of this new social force – the ‘global knowledge worker’, the ‘academic entrepreneur’, the ‘sojourning student’, and other types of ‘creative cosmopolitans’ who inhabit the new economy.» (Eduardo de la Fuente, Communications and Media Studies, Monash University)
«Not without irony, ‘Creativity and the Global Knowledge Economy’ is a creative, insightful survey and evaluation of the exploding theoretical and applied thinking about the emergence of a knowledge-based global economy and society. The editors and authors plumb the exciting prospects of a knowledge capitalism for ceaseless scientific discovery and technological innovation and for affording millions seemingly limitless opportunities for self-determination. The volume’s chapters also brilliantly problematize both the increasingly outdated balkanization of academic agendas and outmoded top-down corporate models that impede rather than foster innovation and creative entrepreneurship. A world where ideas rule and where knowledge is openly and collectively arrived at and universally accessible to everyone at negligible cost challenges the assumption of scarce resources as insurmountable
«‘Creativity and the Global Knowledge Economy’ is an important work of intellectual synthesis as well as a significantly original contribution to the global conversation about the contemporary economic and social significance of knowledge. The authors address key practical questions of the changing role of knowledge in the so-called post-industrial society. They also critically interrogate the rhetoric of the knowledge economy. This book is a comprehensive overview of the origins of the key debates, and at the same time sets an exciting agenda for future lines of discussion and action.» (Bill Cope, Research Professor, Department of Educational Policy Studies, College of Education, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign)
«This insightful and engaging book addresses questions of pressing significance for educationists in the twenty-first century. Peters, Marginson and Murphy provide a perceptive, well-argued account of economic, political and intellectual changes under global knowledge capitalism. They highlight the importance of creativity, imagination and education in the growth and ongoing development of knowledge societies. In these uncertain times, thoughtful, rigorous analysis of the kind demonstrated in this volume is much needed. ‘Creativity and the Global Knowledge Economy’ looks to the future while acknowledging the past. This book makes a valuable contribution to this growing field of research and deserves wide reading.» (Peter Roberts, Professor of Education, University of Canterbury, New Zealand)
«This is first-rate social science. Often there is a huge chasm between the prophets of the ‘new’ and the critics who want to puncture holes in their inflated claims, between social theorists spinning new concepts for understanding changes in economy, society and culture and social scientists who want to demonstrate that these zeitgeist-definers lack empirical depth or that their claims apply to only the few. This book cuts through those kinds of limiting debates by showing that the notion of a ‘global knowledge economy’ points to something real but that the term nonetheless requires unpacking and contextualization. Peters, Marginson and Murphy feel equally at home in the analytical world of Austrian economics or the sociology of post-industrialism, the discipline of management or the study of higher education, a discussion of creativity or the Web 2.0 system. They provide a material and institutional context for the ideas surrounding the ‘global knowledge economy’ and identify key carriers of this new social force – the ‘global knowledge worker’, the ‘academic entrepreneur’, the ‘sojourning student’, and other types of ‘creative cosmopolitans’ who inhabit the new economy.» (Eduardo de la Fuente, Communications and Media Studies, Monash University)
«Not without irony, ‘Creativity and the Global Knowledge Economy’ is a creative, insightful survey and evaluation of the exploding theoretical and applied thinking about the emergence of a knowledge-based global economy and society. The editors and authors plumb the exciting prospects of a knowledge capitalism for ceaseless scientific discovery and technological innovation and for affording millions seemingly limitless opportunities for self-determination. The volume’s chapters also brilliantly problematize both the increasingly outdated balkanization of academic agendas and outmoded top-down corporate models that impede rather than foster innovation and creative entrepreneurship. A world where ideas rule and where knowledge is openly and collectively arrived at and universally accessible to everyone at negligible cost challenges the assumption of scarce resources as insurmountable constraints on economic

ISBN: 9781433104251

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 530g

290 pages

New edition