The Conventional Pathway into Working Life
The image of a pathway implies a transition that is both knowable and known. One classic account of the pathway from education into work is Paul Willis’s
ethnographic study of the experience of English working-class
‘lads’. In
Learning to labour (
1977), Willis
argued that school
education functioned as preparation for working life, not only for successful middle-class students but also for working-class
kids who had failed academically. He suggested that boys or young men who resisted school
discipline and study were engaging in a ‘counter-school’ culture that was an appropriate preparation for their future lives. Their negative reaction to school
made them receptive to the manual work that would be available to them. This would be physically demanding, impersonal and conventionally masculine labour, in contrast to ‘feminised’ study. Their future employment would be well paid and secure, even if the work itself was largely unrewarding, offering little mental stimulation or satisfaction. Willis
predicted that for these young men, after the initial novelty had passed, the hope attached to having a job would run out early. However, they would then endure the work because it was the necessary underpinning for the places they had already taken up in society through conventional relationships of early marriage and parenthood. Willis
therefore offered a totalising, if pessimistic, account of pathways into work that perpetuated existing social divisions and a larger order, integrating schooling, employment and social
class.
Willis’s
young men followed a coherent work–life pathway, although it was one that ultimately gave them limited satisfaction. The working life Willis
anticipated for his ‘lads’ corresponded broadly to an ideal that, Ursula Huws
suggests, became established in the mid- to late twentieth century as a ‘legitimate aspiration’
(Huws
2013, p. 2) for Western workers. The ideal was that ‘employers should provide continuous, contractually formalised employment, offering regular holidays, sick pay, pensions and prospects of advancement’
(Huws
2013, p. 2). However, Huws
notes that the possibility of such positive terms of employment was already being eroded from at least the 1970s. In the UK
and many similar economies, the international oil crisis, technological innovations and the global relocation of manufacturing all threatened the security of many workers. Moreover, the ideal terms of employment had never corresponded to a ‘universal reality’. As Angela
McRobbie (
2016) points out, work has always been precarious for much of the working
class, especially women
and migrant workers. Yet, the ideal is relevant for this collection because it has persisted in the hopes and dreams of successive generations. Despite academic and media accounts of increasing precarity, there is still an expectation that aspiring workers will find a pathway to work on these more secure terms. This is the expectation that is invoked in university
marketing, for instance, in the lists of industries that an institution’s alumni have entered. There is a strong implication that students will transition smoothly from graduation into a career. This is also the expectation that the creative sector has been widely criticised for betraying, for example, when academics have noted its failure to provide stable employment, financial security or a predictable ‘age-stage’ career trajectory for most of its workers (see,
for example, Gill and Pratt
2008).
The Distinctiveness of Creative Work Experience
Aspirants to contemporary creative work have no clear pathway to follow, and this is not the only respect in which their experience differs from that of the ‘lads’ Willis
studied. Indeed, contemporary creative work might appear to the complete converse of the ‘labour’ he described. Unlike many mid-twentieth-century jobs, creative work tends to be badly paid, and employment is on precarious terms. Creative work entails intellectual rather than physical effort. It requires personal involvement and flexible
self-presentation, sometimes in direct conflict with conventional masculinities
(Morgan and Nelligan
2015). Creative
work is individualised, without either the support or constraints of a collective workplace culture. The long hours, the pressure to be flexible
and mobile, and the high level of personal investment all sit uneasily with the claims of partners and dependents (Conor et al.
2015; Taylor and Littleton
2012); creative
work therefore inhibits integration into conventional social relationships. All these challenges might prompt us to revisit Willis’s
opening words: ‘The difficult thing to explain about how middle-class kids get middle-class jobs is why others let them. The difficult thing to explain about how working-class
kids get working-class
jobs is why they let themselves’ (Willis
1977, p. 1).
Now we could ask why people from comfortably middle-class backgrounds ‘let themselves’ aspire to creative careers. Moreover, as Chap.
1 indicated, opportunities in the
creative industries vary according to not only class but
also race
, gender
, ethnicity, age and levels of
disability so that even middle-class aspirants may not be let in.
Willis’s
account rested, first, on established connections between work and class
, and second, on his approach to class
as an unproblematised category that was easily recognisable, by both those who belonged to it and their academic observers. His working-class
categorisation attached not only to people but to occupations, schools
and whole towns. In the twenty-first century, following the expansion of the service sector, the 2008 downturn and its continuing effects, and the global relocation of heavy industries and manufacturing, class
barriers certainly persist but the divisions and intersections are more complex. There are also great changes in the experience of successive generations. For example, this is a period in which increasing numbers of young people are attending
university so that some of the people who enter the cultural
and creative industries as graduates may have been the first in their families to receive tertiary education. Arguably, they are part of an upward transition, at least in their own eyes, but at the same time, middle-class entrants to the sector may be losing the employment security that their parents had expected. The categories of privilege and disadvantage are therefore blurring in both directions. Angela McRobbie (
2016) notes
that in many creative jobs, ‘there is an inflation of status at the same time as there is a deflation of earning power’ (p. 42). At the margins of the cultural and creative
industries, there is also an ‘upgrading of the service sector’ (p. 43), for example, in barista jobs. Aspiring entrants to creative work therefore face uncertainty, not only in the terms of their future employment but also around the meanings attached to their work, and the social positions and identities
it provides.
Additionally and most pertinently for this collection, the pathways into creative work differ greatly from those associated with the earlier ideal of work and employment, discussed in the previous section. As Chap.
1 indicated, becoming a creative worker will seldom be reducible to the kind of single, once-for-all transition described by Willis
. Instead, preparation for work is likely to involve an extended up-and-down process of learning and further learning, personal rebranding, the transferring of skills
and their continuous upgrading to keep up with technological change.
In all these respects, creative work contrasts with the earlier ideal, perhaps even constituting a response to and escape from the experience of workers like Willis’s
lads. Yet the contrast can also be overstated. The earlier ideal of work and employment set out
by Huws (
2013) of course referred mainly to men. It assumed the relegation of women
to a supporting domestic role. Despite its feminised and apparently politically progressive aspects
(Gill
2014; Taylor
2011), creative work perpetuates gendered privilege. There are also barriers to the entry of black
and minority ethnic people into the creative sector, even if the racism
they encounter may (mostly) be less obvious and less overtly brutal than that described by Willis
(Allen, this collection; Patel, this collection). In addition, as many writers
have noted, creative work involves affective labour
(Ekinsmyth
2014; McRobbie
2011; Negri
2008; Ouellette and Wilson
2011) in order to present desired
identities and to cultivate the ‘right’ kind of self in an environment where ‘life is a pitch’
(Gill
2010). There is also pressure to deny difficulties
; Gill (
2014) notes the need for creative workers to be continuously positive. All these forms of performance may require a denial of self similar to that described by Willis
, despite the much celebrated association of creativity with self-actualisation
and personal fulfilment.
The Contemporary Work Experience
Comparison of the cultural
and creative industries with the earlier experience and ideal raises a further question: how far are the difficulties faced by creative workers part of a wider social phenomenon? A number of writers
would associate the changes in work with a more general transition
(Sennett
1998), for example, from Fordism to post-Fordism
(Adkins and Dever
2016). A 2019 collection edited by Enzo Colombo
and Paola
Rebughini (
2019a) presents European
research on the experience of young people today. In their introduction
, Colombo and Rebughini (
2019b) argue
that
all young people must now be flexible
enough to contend with ‘complexity and uncertainty’. In other words, the point is made again that there is no longer a mapped-out pathway to follow. Rather, each young person entering work must construct an individual way forward: ‘Navigating the present, with its multiplicity, its instability and the uncertainty of seizing the right moment, means being able to translate experiences and competences from one situation to another’ (p. 11). This is now a general requirement, although the skills
and resources required for the navigation are not equally distributed. Like Willis
, Colombo
and Rebughini
note how experience differs according to family and class
. For example, those who have more social and economic resources will be able to manage longer ‘transition phases’ between the kinds of work that they want.
Like Willis
, Colombo and Rebughini (
2019b) are discussing
general pathways into work, without specific reference to creative work. Some of the noted challenges of creative work are presented as imperatives for all contemporary workers. For example, much has been made of the ‘personal’ nature of creative
work (e.g. Taylor and Littleton
2012). However, Colombo
and Rebughini
suggest that an ‘over-investment in personal capacities’ is simply a way of reframing contemporary difficulties to make them appear more manageable. Similarly, ‘self-presentation’ (Conor et al.
2015, p. 13) has been claimed as a requirement for creative workers (Gandini and Pais, this collection), but Colombo
and Rebughini
(discussing Theodoridis et al.
2019) suggest that in the absence of other possibilities for young people, ‘action … can be
reduced to the maintenance of a self-image, often virtual and disconnected from real experience, which conforms to social expectations’ (p. 13, emphasis added). A parallel argument can be made about creativity itself. Colombo
and Rebughini
suggest that ‘[t]he capacity of improvisation and adaptation becomes a new form of agency’ for dealing with the challenges of navigation (p. 10). In other words, ‘navigating the present’ requires all young people to be creative. In short, Colombo
and Rebughini’s
account seems to indicate that many of the supposed difficulties of creative work are increasingly more general features of contemporary life: creative work does not have a special significance or status, and the experience of creative workers is inseparable from that of other contemporary workers. The contrary view is that creative work must be considered as a separate category precisely because of the idea of creativity and the pathway that it implies.
The Pathway of (False) Promise
A number of writers on contemporary creative work have proposed that the promise of creativity has a particular function in the workings of contemporary societies, economies and labour markets. This section discusses examples of such accounts from Australia, the UK and Germany.
In research from Australia
that specifically focuses on creative workers, George Morgan
and Pariece
Nelligan (
2018) explain creative work as part of the contemporary phase of capitalism. They suggest that the false promise of creativity motivates young people to enter careers in which they have few prospects. There are too many aspirants for the work that is available, so most will have to compromise and accept the precarious working life of the gig economy
, doing unrewarding small jobs that are often ‘talked
up’. (Morgan and Nelligan [
2018] cite the ludicrous example of an advertisement calling for a job applicant who is ‘passionate’ about selling pet accessories: p. viii.) Morgan and
Nelligan
also propose the concept of ‘feral enterprise’, meaning ‘an acceptable version of capitalism that purports to be faithful to the resistant,
craft, bohemian and/or iconoclastic values of creativity’ (p. 123). Their argument is that such supposedly creative businesses that do succeed are likely to be following conventionally brutal capitalist practices behind a benign creative shopfront. As the title of their book indicates, Morgan
and Nelligan
see the promise of creativity as a ‘hoax’, but one that is functional for ‘modern capitalism’ (p. 14).
There are parallels between
Morgan and Nelligan’s (
2018) arguments
and Angela
McRobbie’s (
2016) widely cited account of the ‘new creative economy’. Following Foucault
, McRobbie proposes
the term ‘creativity
dispositif’ to refer to ‘a self-monitoring, self-regulating mechanism’ (p. 38) in which a romantic notion of creativity persuades young people to accept insecurity. McRobbie
suggests that ‘[w]hat starts as an inner desire for rewarding work is re-translated into a set of techniques for conducting oneself in the uncertain world of creative labour’
(p. 37). She is particularly interested in young people who have followed a higher education pathway (see Chap.
1). She suggests that young workers, especially young women
, discipline themselves to manage the difficulties of creative work cheerfully and enthusiastically, accepting low earnings (often lower than their parents made) and supporting themselves by taking relatively mundane jobs, such as shop assistant and barista, which have been re-labelled in terms of ‘enhanced and upgraded creative values’ (p. 44).
These two accounts
by Morgan and Nelligan (
2018) and by
McRobbie (
2016) set out a particular aspirational and affective pathway into creative work. Would-be creative workers begin with high expectations but achieve only low-status poorly paid work. They seek to reconcile themselves to this situation, with varying degrees of success, accepting the difficulties as part of a larger new normal of working life. Thus, despite their early experiences, they persist. This is an engagement in ‘hope labour’
(Kuehn and Corrigan
2013), following the anticipation of creative rewards that may never be attained. There is an odd parallel here to the account of Willis’s
lads, who would also become locked into largely unsatisfying, if better paid, work, although in their case by their responsibilities to others rather than their own creative
aspiration.
A similar but somewhat more positive account is presented by Andreas
Reckwitz (
2012/2017). Unlike Morgan
and Nelligan
or McRobbie
, Reckwitz
does not present the aspiration
to creativity as one that will almost inevitably be disappointed. Like McRobbie
, he draws on Foucault
and discusses the creative dispositif, but from a broadly Weberian theoretical tradition. Reckwitz
suggests that the rise of ‘organised modernity’ (p. 203) in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries produced a rationalised society: ‘The Fordist
economy, with its mass production, its hierarchical functionalist organization and standardised consumption, the psychology of social control, and the planning regime of the functional city are all constituents of organized modernity’ (p. 203). What was lacking in this context was emotion and affect. Workers had no motivation to participate in work
. Reckwitz (
2012/2017) argues that the more recent aspiration
for the aesthetic
and the rise of the creativity
dispositif are responses to this deficiency. Both centre on an image of the artist as ‘the creative subject’ (p. 206). The image has been further promoted by psychology (see also Taylor
2019) and
a mass media celebrity culture. As a consequence, creativity has become highly valued: ‘It is not the disciplined but, rather, the expressive individual who becomes the popular cultural
ideal’ (Reckwitz
2012/2017, p. 206). The ideal is functional for a larger social order because of the motivation it provides for workers.
The fourth account to be discussed in this section is from Scott
Brook (
2016). His interest is in a rationale for tertiary creative education that rests on its supposed relevance to the wider economy. Brook
looks back to the work of the Australian cultural studies theorist Ian Hunter, who utilised Foucault’s
principles of governmentality in his analysis of the history of education. Hunter proposed that in the early twentieth century, literary education was seen to provide good moral and ethical training because it promoted ‘a range of intimate techniques for ethical self-inspection and moral correction’ (p. 33). The classroom teacher would be a model of the desired ‘type’, demonstrating ‘good taste and rhetorical facility’ (p. 33). These ideas derived from a celebration of the artist as a person who enjoyed ‘psychological health and well-being’ because of his/her ‘sensitivity to experience’ (p. 33). (Taylor [
2019] discusses
other twentieth-century celebrations of the artist as a desirable exemplar.)
Brook’s (
2016) argument
is that in the late twentieth century the artist again came to be seen as a model and exemplar, but this time for economic practices appropriate for the general working population. The artistic type was considered to be especially suited to managing the uncertainties of late twentieth-century employment because of a tendency to self-exploitation and a readiness to take risks and blur the boundaries between work and leisure. This fitted with a perceived new requirement for workers to ‘adopt a more creative approach to their own employability’ (p. 35). The parallels between the artist and the entrepreneur
have been widely
noted (e.g. Taylor
2019). Brook’s (
2016) additional
argument is that these parallels were taken up in higher education, enabling creative education to be reinterpreted as enterprise education, with reference to ‘employability and enterprise
skills’ (p. 34). A different career pathway came to be defined and celebrated. In contrast to the linear pathway of conventional employment, Brook
defines this ‘protean career’ as ‘an emergent form characterised by mobile and intermittent forms of self-employment
, multiple job-holding and short-term contract work, and which is motivated by subjective perceptions of meaningful work’ (p. 35).
Writing in the Australian context
, Brook (
2016) explicitly links the creative industries
project within higher education to the expansion in student places as part of a policy of university
‘massification’ (p. 27). The greater numbers of people attending and graduating from university
with a degree produce ‘academic inflation’
(Brook
2016, p. 32). In such an environment, having a creative degree is no longer a mark of distinction or a unique selling point in the crowded creative
labour market. However
, Brook (
2016) argues that a reinterpretation of creative education in Hunterian terms has been functional for universities
themselves, particularly in Australia
. It resolves a problem that faced Australian universities
in the late twentieth century, of students’ preference for arts and humanities subjects, which at the time were considered to have limited vocational or, on the larger scale, national economic value. The reinterpretation also accommodates the supposed over-supply of creative graduates because they can be argued to benefit the wider economy as ‘embedded
creatives’ who work in different sectors. The supposed relevance of creative education to all kinds of contemporary work removes the pressure on universities
to demonstrate that creative graduates gain employment in the cultural and
creative industries.
Arguably, the reinterpretation is also functional for creative graduates themselves because of the positive self-identification that it offers. The graduates can take pride in themselves for their personal qualities as creative people, and they can also be reconciled to work outside the cultural and
creative industries, applying their personal creativity to activities that would not conventionally be seen as creative work. Terry Flew (
2019) presents a similar argument, suggesting that the artist has been ‘reversioned’ as what Michel Foucault
(
2008, p. 226) termed an ‘entrepreneur of the self’ (Flew
2019, p. 169). Brook’s
account therefore offers a different explanation of why people may continue to seek pathways into creative work. It suggests that the reinterpretation of the creative type has channelled, if not completely tamed, the counter-cultural or oppositional tendencies of the artist. The new ideal functions to condition graduates for more prosaic and difficult future careers in much the same way that
Willis’s ‘counter-school’ culture did for working-class
lads.
The accounts discussed in this section invoke different versions of the creative
worker. Reckwitz’s (
2012/2017) determined searcher for affective rewards perhaps resembles the aware young person described
by Colombo and Rebughini (
2019b), consciously mobilising all available resources in order to navigate precarious
work opportunities as effectively as possible. In contrast, the young person invoked
by McRobbie (
2011,
2016) and
Morgan and Nelligan (
2018) is lured by false promises to serve the current needs of capitalism or at least tolerate its difficulties, as much a victim as the passive, even blinded figure
of Willis’s (
1977) lad who had been socialised into compliance. Brook’s
creative graduate is also reconciled to a difficult working life, but with the (partial) compensation of a strong personal conviction of their own self-worth as a creative person. The common features of the accounts are, first, the focus on the promise of creativity as an inducement that functions to constitute a contemporary worker subject, and second, the suggestion of continuing tensions between the expectations attached to creative work and its contemporary realities. The concluding section of this chapter also considers the viewpoint of the worker, but suggests that it may prompt a different interpretation of possibilities and pathways.
A Worker’s View of the Pathway
Despite the very real problems that have been noted in this chapter and in the collection more generally, some creative workers do discover a pathway to a positive situation. A few will achieve the ‘big break’ of recognition and financial success. Others may give up the hope of creative work, perhaps entering a completely different kind of occupation that still offers the certainty and forward projection described
by Willis (
1977) and Huws (
2013). Yet, others
may knit together their work and life circumstances into a combination that has no neat description but functions for them personally, enabling them to achieve sufficient income alongside the pleasure of creative satisfaction. This may involve a compromise of their original ambitions, in the kind of ‘shovel work’
1 that enables them to earn in a related but less creative activity, like the managers of the co-working
sites discussed by Morgan
(this collection). The creative practitioners who become teachers are probably another example of the compromise. And the workers who accept the interpretation of cultural education
that Brook (
2016) (critically) describes may reinterpret their skills
as functional for work that has no conventional connection to the creative
industries.
For those who are not in the last category, and especially for new aspirants, there remains the question of why the appeal of creativity and creative work apparently persists in the face of several decades of critical debate and evidence concerning the problems of creative working lives. An answer must consider the workers’ own viewpoint, and this may give rise to a different logic from that presented in the previous section
. Taylor (
2019) argues that too little attention has been paid to how creative workers themselves understand creativity. She found that creative practitioners had a different conceptualisation from that of the academics and policymakers who have contributed to its contemporary celebration. This ‘practitioner concept’ of creativity is ‘not coherent or unified’ (p. 466), and it is ‘not identical to any one of the academic conceptualisations, although there are some parallel assumptions’ (p. 453). To conclude this chapter, we will consider two of the implications of the practitioner concept for creative pathways.
The first aspect of the practitioner concept to be noted is that it emphasises transcendence
(Taylor and Paludan
2019) and
an escape from the mundanities of so-called ordinary life. This would suggest that some creative workers are not searching for a pathway to the kind of conventional work success that is marked by external recognition, promotion or increased earnings
(Luckman
2018). Instead, the attraction of creativity may be as an escape from ordinary life and ordinary work. For this reason, too, it is important to note that not all creative entrants are young; they include many who find themselves in an economic and/or family position where they are finally free to pursue a creative dream previously unavailable
to them (Luckman and Andrew
2020).
Transcendence
derives in part from the associations of creativity with the elite arts. Mark
Banks (
2017) has criticised accounts of the creative economy that reduce creative objects and outputs to their sociological significance, calling for acknowledgement of the kind of creative and aesthetic
value (Born
2010) that is evaluated by art historians, among others. Some practitioners may indeed aspire to creative work that is ‘good’ in these aesthetic
terms and apply similar criteria to their own practice and outputs (e.g. see Hesmondhalgh and Baker
2011). Others
may adopt different markers of value, such as the supposed therapeutic utility of a creative practice or outputs
(Taylor and Paludan
2019). In either case, the self-defined markers potentially allow the workers to define achievement and fulfilment in different terms to those which are conventionally applied to work and employment. For example, workers may formulate an alternative interpretation of a progressive pathway as a developing and maturing practice. Another kind of pathway may be defined by political and ethical concerns
(Banks
2007), such as a desire to live a ‘greener’ life, resisting growth and reducing climate impacts, or to operate in a more community-oriented social enterprise or intentional economy mode (Gibson-Graham
2006). In short, the workers may choose to define their own pathways, escaping from both conventional and contemporary evaluations of appropriate achievement and success.
The second relevant aspect of the practitioner concept derives from the linking of creativity to the self. This personal identification, noted by many researchers
(e.g. Taylor and Littleton
2012), makes creativity the ‘generative principle’ (Bourdieu
1996, p. 187) of a life narrative. The self endures, so creative identification becomes a source of continuity through a stop–start pathway of uncertain employment and changing life circumstances, substituting for the continuity that was previously given by Fordist
or modernist
employment and careers. Moreover, somewhat paradoxically, this alternative continuity also accommodates episodic manifestations. In a precarious working life, the creative
self emerges and retreats. Obviously, in times of drudge work, such as a ‘day job’ accepted just to make ends
meet (Morgan and Nelligan
2018, p. 13), the
creative
self is not being mobilised, but neither is it erased or invalidated. Understood in this way, a creative pathway can be detached from the linear narrative of biological ageing which marked the experience of Willis’s
lads. A creative career does not necessarily start at a specified age and life point, like school
leaving, and then proceed in step with the passing of time and conventional life stages. Of course, this detachment of the creative pathway from the biological narrative gives rise to one of the noted problems encountered by creative workers, that their working lives do not readily accommodate the taking up of responsibilities associated with traditional family life. But the positive corollary is that the creative pathway may be joined or resumed at many life points. The creative
self remains available, as in the situation of people who have spent many years looking after children or doing some other kind of dutiful work before reclaiming their creativity in a change of life and work arrangements
(Luckman and Andrew
2020; Taylor and Paludan
2019). The
pathway is no longer linked to age or life circumstances: its possibilities continue, undiminished.