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Article Metadata

Branding bohemia: community literacy and developing difference

Dublin Core PKP Metadata Items Metadata for this Document
1. Title Title of document Branding bohemia: community literacy and developing difference
2. Creator Author's name, affiliation, email Brabazon, Tara; University of Brighton; t.m.brabazon@brighton.ac.uk
2. Creator Author's name, affiliation, email Mallinder, Stephen; University of Brighton; s.w.mallinder@brighton.ac.uk
3. Subject Discipline(s) Creative Industres; popular music studies; popular cultural studies
3. Subject Subject(s) City Imaging, Creative Industries, Popular Music, Urban Regeneration, Perth, Australia
4. Description Abstract City imaging and creative industries strategies and research emphasize the success stories, the urban environments that have rebranded, refocused and reconstituted themselves for the information age and the knowledge economy. Less evident in the literature are those locations and strategies that have failed, stalled or been more ambivalent in their results. This paper investigates a fringe urban suburb of the most isolated capital city in the world. Focusing on Mount Lawley, located on the city fringe of Perth in Western Australia, we investigate the role and function of popular music and popular culture in intervening in staid and conservative histories of cities. Mount Lawley is part of Perth, a city trapped by time and space, but its example may intervene just in time.
5. Publisher Organizing agency, location Centre for Advanced Studies in Integrated Conservation
6. Contributor Sponsor(s)
7. Date (YYYY-MM-DD) 2010-07-22
8. Type Status & genre Peer-Reviewed Article
8. Type Method city imaging and creative industries analysis, historical policy development
9. Format HTML or PDF
10. Identifier Universal Resource Indicator http://www.ceci-br.org/novo/revista/rst/viewarticle.php?id=132
11. Source Journal/conference title; vol., no. (year)
12. Language English=en en
13. Relation Supp. Files
14. Coverage Geo-spatial location, chronological period, research sample (gender, age, etc.) Australia, United Kingdom; 1997-2008 (with historical references back to the 19th century; urban fringe, bohemia, popular music cities
15. Rights Copyright and permissions Copyright for articles published in this journal is retained by the authors, with first publication rights granted to the journal. By virtue of their appearance in this open access journal, articles are free to use, with proper attribution, in educational and other non-commercial settings.


Metadata is used to index research and support related search functions. The Dublin Core Metadata Initiative represents an emerging standard for indexing the source and content of documents. These standards have been employed by the Open Archives Initiative to enable "harvesting" and searching of document metadata across multiple research databases. In this case, the metadata tags have been further defined to improve the indexing of scholarly papers, articles and theses within the Public Knowledge Project.
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