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Reappraising the role of suburban workplaces in Darwin's creative economy

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posted on 2024-11-14, 00:20 authored by Christopher Brennan-HorleyChristopher Brennan-Horley
Traditionally, suburbs have been conceived as dormitory – in binary opposition to the inner-city (Powell). Supporting this stereotypical view have been gendered binaries between inner and outer city areas; densely populated vs. sprawl; gentrified terraces and apartment culture vs. new estates and first home buyers; zones of (male) production and creativity against (female) sedate, consumer territory. These binaries have for over a decade been thoroughly criticised by urban researchers, who have traced such representations and demonstrated how they are discriminatory and incorrect (see Powell; Mee; Dowling and Mee). And yet, such binaries persist in popular media commentaries and even in academic research (Gibson and Brennan-Horley). In creative city research, inner-city areas have been bestowed with the supposed correct mix of conditions that may lead to successful creative ventures. In part, this discursive positioning has been borne out of prior attempts to mapthe location of creativity in the city

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Citation

Brennan-Horley, C. (2011). Reappraising the role of suburban workplaces in Darwin's creative economy. M C Journal, 14 (4), online.

Journal title

M C Journal

Volume

14

Issue

4

Language

English

RIS ID

38690

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