Banks demolishes the creative industries hype about the new meritocracy of cultural work. Balancing data analysis with social theory, his valuable study shows that, after a brief interregnum when absolute beginners were able to scale the heights, the cultural sector is once again becoming a domain of class consolidation.In recent years, theoretically informed and normatively committed critique has been in short supply in the cultural field. Consultants reports and the dreary output of policy wonks have conquered the imaginative space. In this book, drawing on several critical traditions, Mark Banks has broadened the scope of debate, taking culture in itself seriously. By daringly constituting creative justice as an object and vantage-point he skewers current delusions about the nature of cultural work and education and proposes remedies to present inequalities. But will he be heeded?Mark Banks makes music out of the social necessity of normative judgement. Creative Justice starts by paying respect to the cultural object and subject in normative reasoning and action. How do we advance it? By seeking parity of cultural participation, robust economic redistribution of cultural opportunity and enforcement of fair pay, but especially by facing the paramount responsibility to reduce harm in a world where horrific harms of hate and extreme thought threaten to engulf popular reason. Yes, justice can be done. And it may be creative.'An intriguing exploration of the difficulty of evaluating cultural work and cultural objects. In this excellent book, Mark Banks carefully unpicks the theoretical accounts that reduce artistic value to either a social construction or a crude economic calculation. Instead, he seeks to reclaim gradations of 'good' in both practices and products, while at the same time exposing the distortions within the contemporary cultural industries that result from increasing social inequality.'?Creative Justice examines issues of inequality and injustl£²