Publication | Closed Access
CULTURE‐LED URBAN REGENERATION AND THE REVITALIsATION OF IDENTITIES IN NEWCASTLE, GATESHEAD AND THE NORTH EAST OF ENGLAND
247
Citations
6
References
2004
Year
Historical GeographyCultural GlobalisationNew UrbanismCultural HeritageCultural RegenerationContemporary CultureCultural StudiesSocial SciencesCultural Heritage ManagementCulture‐led RegenerationCultural TraditionsCultural PolicyUrban HistoryCultural HistoryLanguage StudiesUrban CultureCultural GeographyArts PolicyCultural SustainabilityArt HistoryUrban PlanningVisual CultureUrban RegenerationCultureCulture ChangeCultural AnthropologyUrban Life
The rhetoric of culture‑led regeneration assumes democratization of culture and empowerment of local communities, yet understanding geographical and historical specifics is essential to see how it strengthens existing identities rather than imposing new ones. The study asks whether alternative paradigms could connect differently to other social and economic drivers of regeneration. The authors chart the emergence of cultural policy in the North East of England, focusing on the 1996 Year of the Visual Arts and data from a 10‑year longitudinal project on Gateshead Quayside. They argue that successful culture‑led regeneration is not a trickle‑down effect but a counter‑balance to broader cultural globalization processes. Keywords: cultural regeneration, globalisation, Gateshead, Newcastle, longitudinal.
Abstract The rhetoric of the cultural policy dimension of culture‐led regeneration makes a variety of assumptions concerned with the democratisation of culture and the empowerment of local communities. In this article, we ask whether there are alternative paradigms that might offer different connections to other drivers of regeneration in the social and economic fields. The article suggests that successful culture‐led regeneration is not about a trickle‐down effect at all, but rather represents a counter‐balance to broader processes of cultural globalisation. We chart the emergence of cultural policy in the North East of England paying particular attention to the impact of Year of the Visual Arts 1996 and to data emerging out of a 10‐year longitudinal research project on the Gateshead Quayside. It is suggested that only an in‐depth understanding of geographical and historical specificities will help us understand the way in which cultural regeneration potentially strengthens existing sources of identity rather than imposing new ones. Keywords: cultural regenerationglobalisationGatesheadNewcastlelongitudinal
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1