The Cultural Creatives

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The Cultural Creatives: How 50 Million People Are Changing the World
Author Paul H. Ray and Sherry Ruth Anderson
Cover artist Whitney Cookman
Country United States
Language English
Subject Social sciences and sociology
Genre Nonfiction
Publisher Harmony Books
Publication date
2000
Media type Print (hardcover and paperback)
Pages 370
ISBN 9780609604670

The Cultural Creatives: How 50 Million People Are Changing the World is a nonfiction social sciences and sociology book by sociologist Paul H. Ray and psychologist Sherry Ruth Anderson,[1] first published in 2000.[2] The authors introduced the term "Cultural Creatives" to describe a large segment in Western society that has recently developed beyond the standard paradigm of modernists or progressives versus traditionalists or conservatives. Ray and Anderson claim to have found that 50 million adult Americans (slightly over one quarter of the adult population) can now be identified as belonging to this group. They estimated that there were an additional 80–90 million "Cultural Creatives" in Europe as of 2000.

Two types

Ray and Anderson divide "Cultural Creatives" into two subdivisions:

Core "Cultural Creatives"

Just under half of the CC population comprises the more educated, leading-edge thinkers. This group includes many writers, artists, musicians, psychotherapists, alternative health care providers and other professionals. They combine a serious focus on their spirituality with a strong passion for social activism.

Green "Cultural Creatives"

The more secular and extroverted wing of the "Cultural Creatives". They tend to follow the opinions of the core group and have a more conventional religious outlook. Their world views are less thought out than the core group and less intensely held.

Characteristics

Ray and Anderson created a questionnaire to identify "Cultural Creatives" in Western society. The below characteristics were identified as qualities of a "Cultural Creative". Agreement with 10 or more indicates status as a "Cultural Creative".

  • love of nature and deep caring about its preservation, and its natural balance.
  • strong awareness of the planet-wide issues like climate change and poverty and a desire to see more action on them
  • being active themselves
  • willingness to pay higher taxes or spend more money for goods if that money went to improving the environment
  • emphasize the importance of developing and maintaining relationships
  • emphasize the importance of helping others and developing their unique gifts
  • volunteer with one or more good causes
  • intense interest in spiritual and psychological development
  • see spirituality as an important aspect of life, but worry about religious fundamentalism
  • desire equality for women and men in business, life and politics
  • concern and support of the well-being of all women and children
  • support spending more money on education, community development programs, and the support of a more ecologically sustainable future
  • unhappy with the left and right in politics
  • optimism towards the future
  • involved in creating a new and better way of life
  • concerned with big business and the means they use to generate profits, including destroying the environment and exploiting poorer countries
  • unlikely to overspend or be heavily in debt
  • dislike the emphasis of modern cultures on "making it" and "success", on consuming and making money
  • like people, places and things that are different or exotic

Values

Ray and Anderson assert that "values are the best single predictor of real behavior". The list below outlines the values that dictate a "Cultural Creative"'s behavior:

  • Authenticity, actions must be consistent with words and beliefs
  • Engaged action and whole process learning; seeing the world as interwoven and connected
  • Idealism and activism
  • Globalism and ecology
  • The importance of women

Core "Cultural Creatives" also value altruism, self-actualization, and spirituality.

In business

The concept of "innerpreneurs" to denote persons who create a business that focuses mainly on their own inner goals and development was first introduced by Rebecca Maddox in her 1996 book Inc. Your Dreams[3] The "innerpreneurs" concept is also central to Ron Rentel's 2008 book Karma Queens, Geek Gods and Innerpreneurs, in which he identified the "Cultural Creative" subculture in entrepreneurship. Rentel named entrepreneurial "Cultural Creatives", "innerpreneurs". "Innerpreneurs" have the defining characteristics of an entrepreneur:

  • high need for achievement
  • high need for independence
  • low need for conformity
  • internal focus of control
  • love of ambiguity
  • propensity for risk-taking
  • obsession with opportunity

But while entrepreneurs use their business for monetary gain, "innerpreneurs" use their business to find personal fulfillment (creatively, spiritually, emotionally) and create social change.

In 2008, there was much discussion in the Western media on the ‘creative economy’ and the importance of the ‘creative class’. Richard Florida published a series of books on this identified 'creative class' and their upcoming economic importance. Bill Gates spoke at the World Economic Forum 2008 on the need for ‘creative capitalism’ as a solution to the world’s problems. They theorize that being creative and inventive will be the key to business success in the 21st century and that a country’s economic success will be determined by its capitalists' ability to mobilize, attract and retain human creative talent.

Usage of the term integral

Ray gives the term "Integral Culture" to the growing subculture also referred to as transmodernism, and which he refers to as the "Cultural Creatives". They are concerned with ecological sustainability and in the case of a core group have a commitment to personal and spiritual development. These are individuals who can meld the best of traditionalism and modernism to create a new synthesis, having a cognitive style based on synthesizing varied information from many sources into a big picture.[4][5] This term can also apply to integral theory, a conceptual framework expounded by Ken Wilber.

See also

Notes

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  3. Inc. Your Dreams, IberLibro.com
  4. Bobbye Middendorf, The Integral Culture - Cultural Creatives Making a Difference for the Future, Conscious Choice, January 1999
  5. Paul H. Ray and Sherry Ruth Anderson, The Cultural Creatives

References

  • Hamilton, Clive (November 2003). Downshifting in Britain: A sea-change in the pursuit of happiness. "The Australia Institute Discussion Paper No. 58". pp. 14–16. ISSN 1322-5421

Further reading

  • Cole, Gary, "Artless: The Odyssey of a Republican Cultural Creative". Portland: Ooligan Press, 2006. ISBN 1-932010-12-2.
  • Lietaer, Bernard (2001) Sustainable Abundance. In The Future of Money (pp. 260–298). London: Century. Describes the connection between Cultural Creatives and new vision of the global economy.