"Yet our presence didn’t seem to matter to anyone, creatively or otherwise. And anyway, Madison’s economy was humming along with unemployment around four percent, while back in fun, creative Portland, it was more than twice that, at eight and a half percent. This was not how the world according to Florida was supposed to work. I started to wonder if I’d misread him. Around town I encountered a few other transplants who also found themselves scratching their heads over what the fuss had been about. Within a couple years, most of them would be gone."
From "The Fall of the Creative Class," by Frank Bures. "Florida" is Richard Florida, author of "The Rise of the Creative Class," who theorized that artists (and gay people and immigrants) cause economic growth, so a city that wants economic expansion ought to adopt a strategy of attracting artists.
Via Ernst Stavro Blofeld.
Wednesday, June 27, 2012
"If Madison was such a Creative Class hotbed overflowing with independent, post-industrial workers like myself, we should have fit in."
Labels:
economics,
Ernst Stavro Blofeld,
Madison,
Richard Florida,
sociology
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
0 comments:
Post a Comment