ABSTRACT

What is it like to work as a classical musician today? How can we explain ongoing gender, racial, and class inequalities in the classical music profession? What happens when musicians become entrepreneurial and think of themselves as a product that needs to be sold and marketed?

Gender, Subjectivity, and Cultural Work explores these and other questions by drawing on innovative, empirical research on the working lives of classical musicians in Germany and the UK. Indeed, Scharff examines a range of timely issues such as the gender, racial, and class inequalities that characterise the cultural and creative industries; the ways in which entrepreneurialism – as an ethos to work on and improve the self – is lived out; and the subjective experiences of precarious work in so-called ‘creative cities’. Thus, this book not only adds to our understanding of the working lives of artists and creatives, but also makes broader contributions by exploring how precarity, neoliberalism, and inequalities shape subjective experiences.

Contributing to a range of contemporary debates around cultural work, Gender, Subjectivity, and Cultural Work will be of interest to scholars and students in the fields of Sociology, Gender and Cultural Studies.

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter 1|31 pages

Setting the stage

The cultural and creative industries, entrepreneurialism, and the classical music profession

chapter Chapter 3|28 pages

The silence that is not a rest

Negotiating hierarchies of class, race, and gender

chapter Chapter 4|27 pages

Entrepreneurialism at work

Mapping the contours of entrepreneurial subjectivity

chapter Chapter 5|30 pages

“Difficult, fickle, tumultuous” and yet “the best job in the world”

Analysing subjective experiences of precarious work

chapter Chapter 6|24 pages

Structures of feeling in two creative cities

London and Berlin

chapter |10 pages

Conclusion

Key contributions, directions for further research, and recommendations