Doing ‘Kulturpolitik’

The continuity of a music festival ensured by ‘subversive repetitions’

Authors

  • Philipp Schmickl Institute for Jazz Research Graz Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/pomh.26929

Keywords:

improvised music, subversive repetition, cultural policies, festivals, neoliberalism, voluntary work, gender

Abstract

In this article I focus on the motives and practices of a group of women who ensured the continuity of the small Austrian music festival ‘Konfrontationen’ after its bankruptcy in 2007. While the association responsible for the festival was being restructured, they assumed responsibilities and re-modelled organizational practices into a cultural-political practice. I look at their agency through the lens of Judith Butler’s concept of subversive repetition. By contextualizing their practices with Austrian cultural policies that have been neoliberalized since the late 1990s, I place them in the arena of what in Austria is called ‘Kulturpolitik’: the negotiation of rivalling (world)views of what is to be understood as ‘culture’ and what the role of that culture is in society.

Author Biography

  • Philipp Schmickl, Institute for Jazz Research Graz

    Philipp Schmickl is currently working as a university assistant at the Institute for Jazz Research Graz, Austria. He is writing his dissertation on the free jazz, improvised music festival ‘Konfrontationen’ which has taken place in the East Austrian borderland since 1980. He is the editor of the book series Theoral, which is dedicated to publishing conversations with improvising musicians.

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Published

2024-03-04

How to Cite

Schmickl, P. (2024). Doing ‘Kulturpolitik’: The continuity of a music festival ensured by ‘subversive repetitions’. Popular Music History, 15(2-3), 156–172. https://doi.org/10.1558/pomh.26929