Urban Myths? Transforming narratives of place
via the media representation of cultural events
Dr Beatriz Garcia
Head of ResearchInstitute of Cultural Capital
Mediated City – Los AngelesWoodbury University & Amps, 1-4 October 2014
European Capitals of Culture & image making
• Major one-off events: a cultural policy priority for aspiring ‘world cities’
• European Capital of Culture Programme (ECoC)• EU initiative, launched in 1985, awarded to 60 cities in 30 European countries
• Glasgow 1990 sparked a new era that is currently taken for granted: the ECoC as a catalyst for city image renaissance
• However, claims of ‘image change’ are rarely supported by concrete evidence
My proposition today | Mediated City Events
• The importance of the media narrative arch surrounding special eventsto solidify ‘image change’ claims about respective host cities
• Core claim: media narratives on the city become defining evidence if:• They show significant change in thematic and attitude focus over time
• They are voluminous enough over a significant period of time
• They cut across geographical and journalistic style variations
From ‘myth management’ to data capture
• Glasgow 1990: a ‘success story’, revisited…
– CCPR, University of Glasgow: The Cities and Culture Project (2002-2006)– 18 years of coverage: award, lead-up, event, 12 years post event (1986-2003)– UK national press, Scottish national & local press, other UK local (6,400 clips)
• Liverpool 2008: a ‘success story’ in the making
– University of Liverpool: Impacts 08, ECoC Research Programme (2006-2010)– 12 years of coverage: 7 years pre-award, award, lead-up, event (1996-2008)– UK national press, Liverpool local press (7,000 clippings)
• Focus of press content analysis
– Which themes emerge as most dominant – How positive or negative are these media reactions– Which topics and attitudes become ‘normalised’ over time
After cities host their event, it is crucial that they learn to
“manage the myth” (Bob Palmer, on ECoCs & legacy building)
Glasgow 1990
Glasgow 1990
• Viewed as a ‘pioneer’ in the production of a culture-led regeneration rhetoric
• ‘Image management’, a key priority (a decade ahead of rest of Europe)
• Becomes a key exemplar of ‘success’ for all ECoCs to comeand referent for cities embarking in a ‘renaissance’ strategy
Glasgow 1990 | Volume & attitudes over time
www.iccliverpool.ac.uk www.beatrizgarcia.net
Pre-and during event year (1986-1990) Post event year (1992-2003)
N= 5,023 articles N= 1,318 articles
Source: CCPR Cities & Culture Project Datasets (see Garcia 2004)
% attitudes pre & during event: 1986-1990 % attitudes post event: 1992-2003
Glasgow 1990 | Attitudinal change
www.iccliverpool.ac.uk www.beatrizgarcia.net
N= 5,023 articles N= 1,318 articles
Source: CCPR Cities & Culture Project Datasets (see Garcia 2004)
Pre-and during event year (1986-1990) Post event year (1992-2003)
Glasgow 1990 | Thematic emphasis
N= 5,023 articles N= 1,318 articles
Source: CCPR Cities & Culture Project Datasets (see Garcia 2004)
Liverpool 2008
Liverpool 2008 | UK national stereotypes
Images being circulated online at the time of the ECoC bid, 2002-2003
Liverpool | International perception
Reimaging Liverpool…
Reimaging Liverpool
Glasgow 1990 vs Liverpool 2008
• Changes in the volume & attitudes to stories from award to event year
0
10
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50
60
70
80
90
100
2003 2005 2007 2008
negative
neutral
positive
% 0
10
20
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2003 2005 2007 2008
%
Liverpool 2008 | Attitudes
UK national press (2003-2008) Liverpool local press (2003-2008)
N= 1,138 articles N= 5,811 articles
Source: Impacts 08 Press Content Analysis (Garcia 2010: p. 27)
Liverpool 2008 | ThemesUK national press (1996-2008) Liverpool local press (2003-2008)
Source: Impacts 08 Dataset Analysis & Garcia 2010
Top graphs: clippings that refer to the ECoC 2008 explicitly (N= 1,138 nationally; N= 5,811 locally)
Bottom graphs: clippings about Liverpool that do not include any explicit reference to the ECoC (N= 14,453 nationally; N= 31,275 locally)
Press narratives of urban changeTwo decades of regeneration stories
The media narrative arch: 1986 to 2008• Over thirty years, some noticeable changes in the thematic and attitudinal
emphasis of press stories about major events
– A move from understanding – and narrating – regeneration as amainly physical process into a mainly symbolic process
– A growth in the proportion of positive analysis
• Media coverage trends that remain similar
– Switch between quality of the city’s cultural offer (event year) and projected economic outputs (award year) or economic legacies (aftermath)
– Governance becomes noticeable and focus of most negative coverage (event)– Emphasis on the capacity for cities to experience an image renaissance as
most frequent justification for success
• Variations in treatment of key themes: economics & culture relationship
– Glasgow: showing that culture had an economic dimension was considered a novelty and became a key argument to project the city as a successful pioneer
– Liverpool: generic claims not sufficient: economic impacts must be evidenced; quality and distinctiveness of cultural offer must also be clearly articulated to attract discerning ‘creative classes’
Discussion
• The media have played a key role in re-shaping the image of Glasgow and Liverpool, two cities ridden by widespread negative stereotyping
• Sustained reference to both cities as exemplars of ‘successful’ event-led regeneration within expert reporting evidence effect of journalistic discourse to assert a city’s identity nationally and internationally
• This suggests that one of the most effective mechanisms for cities to reposition themselves is to have a powerful story to tellabout ‘change’ and ‘overcoming decline’
• In a highly competitive urban development environment, where large numbers of cities invest in similar strategies for regeneration,it is not sufficient to be effective in the delivery of actual (positive) change:
• generating momentum and carefully managing how the story is toldis paramount to attract a sufficient critical mass of press attention with the capacity to become a national and/or international referent which, in turn, is more likely to self-sustain over time
Thank You
Dr Beatriz García@beatriz_garcia
www.beatrizgarcia.netwww.iccliverpool.ac.uk