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Cultural Production and Consumption
The CP&C Research Group is concerned with the cultural economy of value. In the context of consumer economies increasingly driven by creative work, cultural goods and the immaterial, CP&C research examines how cultural values are accomplished through fields and practices of production and consumption—how they are produced and consumed, negotiated and contested, accomplished and promoted. CP&C is co-directed by Jennifer Smith Maguire and Julian Matthews. Check out our events.
CP&C research is multi-disciplinary and embraces a variety of methodologies. Its principal research streams examine:
Who We Are:
Current Projects:Research projects currently running:
Previous Projects:Research projects recently completed:
CP&C Events:Find more research-related news and other items in News from the Department. Cultural Production & Consumption Brown Bag Lunches Next date: TBC Location: Bankfield House (132 New Walk, Leicester, LE17JA), 3rd floor café area Past talks:
Cultural Production & Consumption Annual Research Events 2012/13:'Negotiating the Local at a Food Festival: A Collaborative Research Event' (Autumn 2012) Building on the success of our 2011/12 'Thinking with Food' event, we're putting our ideas to work! The CP&C Research Event for 2012/13 will be a two-day hands-on project, using the collaborative approach of ‘swarm research’ to explore how notions of 'the local' are constructed and negotiated in the context of a local food festival. Event details and an invitation to participate will be available in summer, 2012. Past events: 'Thinking with Food: An Ideas Exchange' (28 September 2011) 'Thinking with Food' was CP&C's first annual research event. Co-organized by Julian Matthews and Jennifer Smith Maguire, the event attracted participants from across the UK and EU, including academics, postgraduate students and practitioners involved with the study of food. Designed as an interactive event, the day included a mixture of sessions: formal research papers focused on food in the media and the mediation of food, and hands-on and reflective activities through which all participants had a chance to critically and creatively engage with, apply and develop the ideas and concepts related to the cultural production and consumption of food. In short: a busy and productive day! See the full write-up of the event, including programme and participant list.
Interested in Doing a PhD?Members of the research group would be interested in supervising research that considers issues of cultural production and consumption. Please follow the links above to individual members' web pages for a list of potential topics. Interested in getting involved as a member or associate member? |
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