Explores creativity and accompanying evaluative practices in a series of richly textured ethnographic case studies of creative industries.Explores the creative processes surrounding the conception, design, manufacture, appraisal and use of creative goods, and examines evaluative practices in the creative industries. Moeran and Christensen draw from case studies to reveal a broad range of material, stylistic, aesthetic, organizational, situational and financial factors which guide and restrain the creative process.Explores the creative processes surrounding the conception, design, manufacture, appraisal and use of creative goods, and examines evaluative practices in the creative industries. Moeran and Christensen draw from case studies to reveal a broad range of material, stylistic, aesthetic, organizational, situational and financial factors which guide and restrain the creative process.Under the guidance of Moeran and Christensen, the authors in this volume examine evaluative practices in the creative industries by exploring the processes surrounding the conception, design, manufacture, appraisal, and use of creative goods. They describe the editorial choices made by different participants in a 'creative world', as they go about conceiving, composing or designing, performing or making, selling and assessing a range of cultural products. The study draws upon ethnographically rich case studies from companies as varied as Bang and Olufsen, Hugo Boss, and Lonely Planet, in order to reveal the broad range of factors guiding and inhibiting creative processes. Some of these constraints are material and technical; others are social or defined by aesthetic norms. The authors explore how these various constraints affect creative work, and how ultimately they contribute to the development of creativity.Foreword Howard S. Becker; Introduction Brian Moeran and Bo T. Christensen; 1. What's the matter with Jarrettsville? Genre classification as an unstable and opportunistic constlÓg