Description

Book Synopsis
What is the craft worker’s experience of the challenges and opportunities afforded through entrepreneurship?

This book reveals the individual experience of craft entrepreneurship, drawing on case studies from around the world, considering questions of identity, policy, community, and the digital in crafting a life.

Craft practice has experienced a sharp rise in popularity since the late 2000s as demand and interest for authentic handmade products has increased in a fast paced, digitalised world. Etsy and social media platforms allow seemingly ‘anyone’ to become a craft entrepreneur. As part of the creative economy and regional cultural policy initiatives, craft and artisanal practices are encouraged by governments. But

Table of Contents
Introduction – Craft Entrepreneurship
Part 1: Craft Entrepreneurship & Cultural Policy
1. Craft - The new entrepreneurship?
Julia Bennett, Crafts Council UK
2. Far out crafting
Andrea Peach, Robert Gordon University
3. Craft entrepreneurship and public policies in Serbia
Hristina Mikic, Institute for Creative Entrepreneurship and Innovation Serbia
4. Artisan or designer: Montreal craft workers and the global discourse on creativity
Guillaume Sirois, University of Montreal
Part 2: Craft Entrepreneurship in the digital age
5. “Safe spaces” and “cultural appropriation” – opportunities and challenges for BAME women makers using social media
Karen Patel, Birmingham City University
6. Online entrepreneurial practices of the craft entrepreneur
Julia Griffey, Webster University
7. “I can’t put that out there as me”: Exploring the relationship between creative identity and intellectual property in contemporary craft
Lauren England, King’s College London
Part 3: Crafting a Life
8. From amateur to all-business: women on the verge of craft entrepreneurship
Mary Kay Culpepper, Buffalo State university
9. Smoothing out the peaks and troughs: examining the sustainability strategies of island-based creative practitioners
Katherine Champion, University of Stirling
10. Becoming a craft entrepreneur: a journey of identity change and conflict
Vishalakshi Roy, University of Warwick
11. Crafty women and entrepreneurship
Annette Naudin, Birmingham City University
Part 4: Craft Entrepreneurship & Community
12. Tight-knit: shaping a hybrid entrepreneurial model for empowering women in craft communities
Jaleesa Wells, De Montfort University
13. Collaborative mindsets and collective action plans: supporting the strategic development of Scotland’s craft network
Louise Valentine, University of Dundee
14. Making it is gendered work: how “For the love of making” within Maker Culture obscures gendered labour hierarchies within Canadian “DIT” communities
Jessica Ring, Carleton University

Craft Entrepreneurship

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    £84.60

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    RRP £94.00 – you save £9.40 (10%)

    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Fri 19 Jun 2026.

    A Hardback by Annette Naudin, Karen Patel

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      View other formats and editions of Craft Entrepreneurship by Annette Naudin

      Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield International
      Publication Date: 10/12/2020
      ISBN13: 9781786613745, 978-1786613745
      ISBN10: 1786613743

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      What is the craft worker’s experience of the challenges and opportunities afforded through entrepreneurship?

      This book reveals the individual experience of craft entrepreneurship, drawing on case studies from around the world, considering questions of identity, policy, community, and the digital in crafting a life.

      Craft practice has experienced a sharp rise in popularity since the late 2000s as demand and interest for authentic handmade products has increased in a fast paced, digitalised world. Etsy and social media platforms allow seemingly ‘anyone’ to become a craft entrepreneur. As part of the creative economy and regional cultural policy initiatives, craft and artisanal practices are encouraged by governments. But

      Table of Contents
      Introduction – Craft Entrepreneurship
      Part 1: Craft Entrepreneurship & Cultural Policy
      1. Craft - The new entrepreneurship?
      Julia Bennett, Crafts Council UK
      2. Far out crafting
      Andrea Peach, Robert Gordon University
      3. Craft entrepreneurship and public policies in Serbia
      Hristina Mikic, Institute for Creative Entrepreneurship and Innovation Serbia
      4. Artisan or designer: Montreal craft workers and the global discourse on creativity
      Guillaume Sirois, University of Montreal
      Part 2: Craft Entrepreneurship in the digital age
      5. “Safe spaces” and “cultural appropriation” – opportunities and challenges for BAME women makers using social media
      Karen Patel, Birmingham City University
      6. Online entrepreneurial practices of the craft entrepreneur
      Julia Griffey, Webster University
      7. “I can’t put that out there as me”: Exploring the relationship between creative identity and intellectual property in contemporary craft
      Lauren England, King’s College London
      Part 3: Crafting a Life
      8. From amateur to all-business: women on the verge of craft entrepreneurship
      Mary Kay Culpepper, Buffalo State university
      9. Smoothing out the peaks and troughs: examining the sustainability strategies of island-based creative practitioners
      Katherine Champion, University of Stirling
      10. Becoming a craft entrepreneur: a journey of identity change and conflict
      Vishalakshi Roy, University of Warwick
      11. Crafty women and entrepreneurship
      Annette Naudin, Birmingham City University
      Part 4: Craft Entrepreneurship & Community
      12. Tight-knit: shaping a hybrid entrepreneurial model for empowering women in craft communities
      Jaleesa Wells, De Montfort University
      13. Collaborative mindsets and collective action plans: supporting the strategic development of Scotland’s craft network
      Louise Valentine, University of Dundee
      14. Making it is gendered work: how “For the love of making” within Maker Culture obscures gendered labour hierarchies within Canadian “DIT” communities
      Jessica Ring, Carleton University

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