Economic Geography
Capitalism, culture, and geography
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Economic and social geography
Capitalism, culture, and geography
Economic geographers discover culture Just as geographical economics was making its appearance on the academic scene in the early 1990s, a number of economic geographers were transferring their attentions to an altogether different set of approaches rooted in issues of culture. The emergence of this interest coincided with a growing conviction that not only A perspective of economic geography 65 were certain earlier generations of geographers and other social scientists incor- rect to regard culture simply as an outcome of underlying economic realities, but that these realities themselves are in fundamental ways subject to the play of cultural forces. Any casual scrutiny of contemporary capitalism reveals at once that it is inflected with different social and cultural resonances in different localities, and that these resonances are directly implicated in the organization of economic life and modalities of economic calculation. American, Japanese, and Chinese capitalism, for example, are at once generically similar and yet are marked by socio-cultural idiosyncrasies with significant effects on the ways in which they function. In addition, production systems in contemporary capitalism, while still obviously highly focused on the mechanical manufacture of things, are shifting more and more into the processing of information and symbols, from business advice to cultural services. This trend is leading to dramatic changes in the form and function of commodified goods and services, and much research is now moving forward on the reception, interpretation, and social effects of these outputs (Bridge and Smith 2003; Jackson 1999; Thrift 2000). This research points to important theoretical issues concerning the hermeneutics of the commodity, and the functions of capitalism generally as a fountainhead of symbolic representation in modern life (e.g. Harvey 1989; Lash and Urry 1994). Striking changes are also occurring in the social and psychological make-up of the workplace. Over large areas of the new economy of capitalism, dress, mannerisms, forms of speech, self-presentation, and so on have become essential elements of workers’ performance. Equally, gender, race, ethnicity, and so on, together with specific forms of empathy associated with them are being actively exploited and managed in various ways in the workplace (cf. McDowell 1997). More generally, markets as a whole could not work in the absence of a sociocultural system regulating the conventions and behaviors that sustain them. These brief remarks, schematic as they may be, already underline the obvious and pressing need for economic geographers to pay close attention to the ways in which culture and economy intersect with one another in mutually constitutive ways. The urgency of this need is reinforced by the observation that the economic and the cultural come together with special intensity in place (Shields 1999), and that many of the key agglomerations constituting the focal points of the new economy around the world are critically dependent on the complex play of culture. Thus, to an ever-increasing degree, the productive performance of agglomerations like the City of London (Thrift 1994), Hollywood (Scott 2002a), or Silicon Valley (Saxenian 1994) can only be understood in relation to their joint economic and cultural dynamics. Each of these places is shot through with distinctive traditions, sensibilities, and cultural practices that leave deep imprints on phenomena such as management styles, norms of worker habituation, creative and innovative energies, the design of final outputs, and so on, and these phenomena in turn are strongly implicated in processes of local economic growth and development. 66 Allen J. Scott |
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