<i>Fringe to Famous</i> rejuvenates enduring but stale debates between intrinsic and instrumental approaches to cultural value with a fresh take on their productive tension but necessary complementarity. It achieves this while diving deep into diverse and exhilarating histories of Australian cultural scenes of recent decades.
Stuart Cunningham, Distinguished Professor of Media and Communications, Queensland University of Technology, Australia
I learnt such a lot from this book about the richness of Australian popular culture over recent decades. But itâs also a superb rethinking of the relations between margins and mainstreams in cultural production. Anyone interested in the cultural industries should read it.
David Hesmondhalgh, Professor of Media, Music and Culture, University of Leeds, UK
Through a deep weaving together of the rich individual stories, communities, and economic negotiations of over four decades worth of pioneering Australian creativity, <i>Fringe to Famous</i> presents a theoretically rich but also very human picture of the complex entanglements of contemporary cultural ecologies. Moving beyond simple binaries of mainstream/alternative, subculture/selling out, independent/co-opted, it situates the economic realities of making a living as an artist within a complex and diverse world where hope for something more, something better as represented by the âfringeâ remains very much alive.
Susan Luckman, Professor of Culture and Creative Industries, University of South Australia