Creative (and Cultural) Industry Entrepreneurship in the 21st Century

Inge Hill|Sara R. S. T. A. Elias|Stephen Dobson|Paul Jones
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Hardback
9781803824123
08 December 2023
£80.00
eBook (PDF)
9781803824116
08 December 2023
£80.00
eBook (ePub)
9781803824130
08 December 2023
£80.00

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  • Description
  • Contents
  • About

Creative and cultural industries are growing in almost every nation around the world and over the last two decades have contributed to global, national, and local economies significantly. More recently, policy makers and those who start these creative businesses have demonstrated a greater interest in how creative entrepreneurs create, sustain and market their services and products. And how contexts influence their ‘doing business’ is of increasing importance.

Both volumes of Creative (and Cultural) Industry Entrepreneurship in the 21st Century map and elucidate the adaptations and challenges faced by the creative professionals and the entrepreneurial solutions they have co-developed. Illuminating how contexts and recent socio-economic disruptive challenges influence how value is created and maintained from start-up to growth and exit, the chapter authors take a fresh look at creative micro-businesses and SMEs, the processes leading to their formation, developments and their founders.

Contemporary Issues in Entrepreneurship Research is an official book series of the Institute for Small Business and Entrepreneurship (ISBE). Each volume is designed around a specific theme of importance to the entrepreneurship and small business community with articles collectively exploring and developing theory and practice in the field.

Chapter 1. Creative (and Cultural) Industry Entrepreneurship in the 21st Century - State of the Art; Inge Hill, Sara R. S. T. A. Elias, Stephen Dobson, and Paul Jones

  • Conceptual Reflections on CCI Entrepreneurship
  • Chapter 2. Entrepreneurship Research in Cultural and Creative Industries: Identifying Key Ingredients of a ‘Hodgepodge; Ellen Loots
  • Chapter 3. Cultural and Arts Entrepreneurship: The Importance of Being Aesthetic; Simony R. Marins and Eduardo Davel
  • Chapter 4. On Entrepreneurial Brainchildren: The Concept of Inditation – Towards a Theory; Ulrike Posselt
  • Chapter 5. The Slipperiness of Entrepreneurial Intention in Narratives of Cultural and Creative Industries Entrepreneurship; David Sharpe
  • Resilience and Adaptation of Creative and Cultural Enterprises
  • Chapter 6. Mask Makers as Emerging Creative Entrepreneurs During COVID-19; Hannah Grannemann, Jennifer Reis, Maggie Murphy, and Marie Segares
  • Chapter 7. Fostering Creative Entrepreneurship through Self Help Group: Post Covid Resilience; Bhawana Bhardwaj, Balkrishan Patarwal, and Dipanker Sharma
  • Chapter 8. The Resilience and Adaptability of an Innovative Ecosystem of Creative Entrepreneurs During Crisis Times: Baltic Creative CIC – A Case Study; Fiona Armstrong-Gibbs and Jan Brown
  • Insights into Creative Subsectors
  • Chapter 9. Daddy or Hubby? Family and Female Entrepreneurship in the Indian Movie Industry; Rajeev Kamineni and Ruth Rentschler
  • Chapter 10. Between Professionalisation and Marginalisation in the Creative (and Cultural) Industries: A New Look of the Work of Musicians in a French Large Creative City; Nantalie Schieb-Bienfait and Sandrine Emin
  • Chapter 11. A Critical Appraisal of Challenges Facing Fashion Entrepreneurs in BAME and Disadvantaged Communities; Samuel Osei-Nimo, Emmanuel Aboagye-Nimo, and Doreen Adusei MBE
  • Chapter 12. Creative Industries in Cameroon: Problems and Prospects; Ernestine Ning
  • Chapter 13. An Examination of the Relationship between Creative Identity and Entrepreneurial Identity; Jacqueline Jenkins

Inge Hill is Lecturer in Entrepreneurship, The Faculty of Business & Law, The Open University Business School, UK, a Visiting Professor at IDRAC Business School, France, and a Fellow of the Royal Society of the Arts, Manufacture and Commerce.

Sara R. S. T. A. Elias is Associate Professor at the University of Victoria’s Peter B. Gustavson School of Business, Canada, and a Research Associate of the Center for Psychosocial Organization Studies.

Stephen Dobson is Associate Profession in Creativity and Enterprise at the School of Performance and Cultural Industries, University of Leeds, UK.

Paul Jones is Head of School and Professor of Entrepreneurship and Innovation at the School of Management, Swansea University, UK.