Abstract
This article is about the value of music, measured not in aesthetic terms, but rather as a matter of practical politics. The question of cultural value is, of course, familiar to those who study cultural policy. Typically, the political debate divides between (1) those who argue that music must take its chance in the market, where its value will be revealed in the price consumers are willing to pay; (2) those who see music as having social value, beyond that realised in the market, but seek to measure that value in terms recognised by economists (e.g. Contingent Valuation); and finally (3), those who reject the economistic route, and argue that music’s value is of a different order and kind. What can get overlooked in this debate, and why it can be so frustrating, is the politics that underlies it – the politics of power and policy-making, and the politics of principle. This article argues that we should focus more explicitly on the politics, seeing culture – in this case, music – as a political resource and the bearer of political values, and to see music policy as an articulation of political value as much as of cultural value.
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Acknowledgements
Work on this article was supported by the ESRC Centre for Competition Policy at the University of East Anglia. Various versions were presented at the ‘Policy Notes’ Conference in Melbourne, and to research seminars at the Universities of Bergen, East Anglia, Edinburgh, and Leeds. I am very grateful to the many participants, and especially to Shane Homan, Jay Blumler, Matt Brennan, Martin Cloonan, Morten Hviid, David Hesmondhalgh, Torgeir Uberg Naerland and Karin Voltmer.