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More About This Textbook
Overview
This book explores the organization of creative industries, including the visual and performing arts, movies, theater, sound recordings, and book publishing. In each, artistic inputs are combined with other, "humdrum" inputs. But the deals that bring these inputs together are inherently problematic: artists have strong views; the muse whispers erratically; and consumer approval remains highly uncertain until all costs have been incurred.
To assemble, distribute, and store creative products, business firms are organized, some employing creative personnel on long-term contracts, others dealing with them as outside contractors; agents emerge as intermediaries, negotiating contracts and matching creative talents with employers. Firms in creative industries are either small-scale pickers that concentrate on the selection and development of new creative talents or large-scale promoters that undertake the packaging and widespread distribution of established creative goods. In some activities, such as the performing arts, creative ventures facing high fixed costs turn to nonprofit firms.
To explain the logic of these arrangements, the author draws on the analytical resources of industrial economics and the theory of contracts. He addresses the winner-take-all character of many creative activities that brings wealth and renown to some artists while dooming others to frustration; why the "option" form of contract is so prevalent; and why even savvy producers get sucked into making "ten-ton turkeys," such as Heaven's Gate. However different their superficial organization and aesthetic properties, whether high or low in cultural ranking, creative industries share the same underlying organizational logic.
Editorial Reviews
David Throsby
By documenting a wide range of commercial interactions across the creative industries, this comprehensive and immensely readable book shows persuasively that economic theory can help us understand the sheer business of making art happen. [Caves] uses contract and industrial-organization theory to throw light on how and why the industries producing cultural goods and services—from literature to film, from rock music to opera—work as they do...Caves does not engage issues of ideology, nor of the political or economic importance of the arts, but simply sees the creative industries as fascinating areas of economic activity which have been largely neglected by economists...By documenting a wide range of commercial interactions across the creative industries, this comprehensive and immensely readable book shows persuasively that economic theory can help us understand the sheer business of making art happen.Winston Fletcher
Creative Industries explores the economics of the arts in exacting detail. With great skill and originality, Caves has analysed the economic forces operating in music, book publishing, painting, the theatre and movies.David Throsby
By documenting a wide range of commercial interactions across the creative industries, this comprehensive and immensely readable book shows persuasively that economic theory can help us understand the sheer business of making art happen.—Times Literary Supplement
Product Details
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Meet the Author
Richard E. Caves is Nathaniel Ropes Research Professor of Political Economy at Harvard University.
Table of Contents
Preface
Introduction: Economic Properties of Creative Activities
Part I: Supplying Simple Creative Goods
1. Artists as Apprentices
2. Artists, Dealers, and Deals
3. Artist and Gatekeeper: Trade Books, Popular Records, and Classical Music
4. Artists, Starving and Well-Fed
Part II: Supplying Complex Creative Goods
5. The Hollywood Studios Disintegrate
6. Contracts for Creative Products: Films and Plays
7. Guilds, Unions, and Faulty Contracts
8. The Nurture of Ten-Ton Turkeys
9. Creative Products Go to Market: Books and Records
10. Creative Products Go to Market: Films
Part III: Demand for Creative Goods
11. Buffs, Buzz, and Educated Tastes
12. Consumers, Critics, and Certifiers
13. Innovation, Fads, and Fashions
Part IV: Cost Conundrums
14. Covering High Fixed Costs
15. Donor-Supported Nonprofit Organizations in the Performing Arts
16. Cost Disease and Its Analgesics
Part V: The Test of Time
17. Durable Creative Goods: Rents Pursued through Time and Space
18. Payola
19. Organizing to Collect Rents: Music Copyrights
20. Entertainment Conglomerates and the Quest for Rents
21. Filtering and Storing Durable Creative Goods: Visual Arts
22. New versus Old Art: Boulez Meets Beethoven
Epilogue
Notes
Index