Culture Unbound Vol. 3 Editorial

With this volume, Culture Unbound celebrates its five-year anniversary. This makes a good opportunity both to look back at what we have achieved and to gaze ahead to what we have planned for the fu ...

There is thus an overflowing excess of culture in every corner of society, including university research.Still, the flows of culture are far from boundless.Important struggles continue to develop around the boundaries of what is understood as cultural; manifested, for instance, in attempts to regulate or pinpoint distinctions between culture and (cosmological or biological) nature, society, or politics.Equally fierce efforts and conflicts are waged in drawing, attacking, or defending various internal borders that divide forms of culture from each other within the field.One task for cultural research consists of reflecting upon such practices of differentiation and coming to grips with how they manage to survive and thrive in spite of all ideological talk of erasing every boundary, for instance in the digital domain or when it comes to the historical transformation of social norms.

Culture Unbound
The inter-, trans-, or multidisciplinarity of cultural research has ambiguous results.On the one hand, it should make this research interesting to a wider public than would more-limited disciplinary approaches.On the other hand, the openness itself may also deter potential users who do not quite know what to expect with such a publication.For someone primarily interested in one field, for instance sociology, literature, or history, a wide mix of different studies may not be as attractive as a more-focused journal in one's own field.There is a certain risk of estranging more-rigid or -discipline-bound readers and authors.This is common to all multidisciplinary fields, units, and publications.For a hard-core historian, cultural studies will always include too little history, while one-track literary or sociology scholars will likewise find that other fields dominate too much.The open access electronic format improves things somewhat since it is easy for anyone to use search engines to find those specific articles that are most relevant to them, hopefully also getting a brief glimpse of the rest of the publication in the process.
Two of Culture Unbound's editors are themselves trained in interdisciplinary environments and have received Ph.D. degrees with a hybrid profile -Jenny Johannisson from the Swedish School of Library and Information Science, University of Borås, and Martin Fredriksson from the Department of Culture Studies (Tema Q), Linköping University.The third editor, Johan Fornäs, has throughout his career moved between disciplines as well as (Swedish) universities.Thus, he, in practice, has a similarly hybridised academic identity.The journal certainly suits people like us, but having also been in monodisciplinary contexts, we stubbornly insist that it is highly relevant to other scholars as well, since it is always useful to at least momentarily step back a little and have a look at things from a slightly different perspective.This is how new ways are created for understanding cultural processes.
The strength of a multidisciplinary perspective also lies in its ability to endorse and make use of the specific knowledge and methods developed within a range of different academic disciplines.That is why Culture Unbound also invites morespecialised articles, such as Katherine Giuffre's quantitative analysis of creativity and network density in Emily Dickinson's authorship that was published in December 2010, or Philip Dineen's study of Arnold Schöberg's aesthetic theory in our first volume.It all adds up to a multifaceted outlook where various aspects of cultural research intersect to give a richer and fuller understanding of how culture exists in different contexts.
Culture Unbound will continue to widen the field.We welcome articles and theme sections that reflexively deal with such basic issues of conceptual history and strategies for research policy, but there is also always room for texts that dive into shifting cultural flows, interpreting and mapping out the force fields of meaning production.This attempt to be inclusive without forfeiting the exclusive can be regarded as an overarching agenda for Culture Unbound, and our experience so far indicates that many authors and readers find this approach fruitful.During 2010, the Culture Unbound website had more than 13,000 visitors and the most downloaded individual article -Henry Krips, 'The Politics of the Gaze: Foucault, Lacan and Žižek' -had almost 1,600 readers.The journal's mailing list has about 200 members and more than 800 people have signed up as fans on Facebook.And the experts agree!The Open Humanities Press's Editorial Oversight Group has read the first one and a half volumes and praised 'the diversity and general feel' of this 'fascinating journal', seeing it as 'a potential flagship journal' for humanities open access publishing: 'This is one where I find myself wanting to read all the essays'.

The Year That Was
Over the last year, it seems like Culture Unbound has managed to attract a circle of readers and develop a distinct scholarly identity, largely constituted by a combination of academic quality, relevance, and diversity.And it is indeed important for Culture Unbound to strike a good balance between its various elements: for instance, the humanities and social sciences, artistic research, and other sciences.Here, we strive not to fall into either of these categories, but to offer insights from them both, and not least to look for topics and texts that manage to combine them in original and innovative ways.The 2010 publications are good examples of this as they mark a wide disciplinary and thematic scope spanning from historiography and museology to sociology of literature to urban studies and media analysis.
An attempt to roughly categorise the contributors to the second volume of Culture Unbound reveals that the two most represented disciplines are media & communication studies (twelve authors, 27% of the total number) and cultural economics (eight authors, 18%), followed by cultural studies (seven authors), comparative literature (five authors), and history (four authors).The general distribution between social sciences and humanities is rather balanced: twentythree authors from the social sciences vs. twenty-one from the humanities.It is, however, interesting to see that a journal entitled Culture Unbound draws so much attention from two disciplines as firmly rooted in the social sciences as media & communication studies and cultural economics.Of course, this is just arbitrarily playing with numbers, as many of the articles and thematic sections we publish are characterised by their very ability to reach beyond such simplifying academic categories.Still, we believe that a multidisciplinary journal should keep such records to enable scrutiny of academic power relations as well as to provide input to the debate over why some academic disciplines seem to more easily transgress boundaries than others.
Another balance is that between a Swedish and Nordic research context and an expanding network of European and global interests, actors, theme editors, and authors.Culture Unbound has so far published authors from fifteen different countries on four continents and this geographic diversity has been one of the journal's significant traits from the beginning -partly thanks to the diversity of its editorial committee.At the same time, Culture Unbound has a Swedish editorial basis that is certainly not hidden, and there is, of course, a statistical bias towards material from our own region in what has been published so far.But identities are never fixed or unified.Not only disciplinary, but also national affiliations are being weakened in the increasingly internationalised research landscape of today.Place, of course, matters, but the individual can no longer be easily identified by either his/her place of birth or current affiliation.How do we, for instance, define an American working at a Swedish university, or a Canadian with a German Ph.D. working in New Zealand?Culture Unbound is not only formed by a new disciplinary topography, but also by the cosmopolitanism of twenty-first century academia: it results from a complex pattern of superimposed communities, where the Swedish, the Nordic, and the European profile crisscross and make the totality relevant to the overall global current of contemporary cultural research.
There are, in any case, good reasons for us to be proud of the accomplishment of Culture Unbound, and of the many authors, co-editors, and reviewers who have made it possible.The necessary funding has been generously provided by Linköping University's Faculty of Arts and Sciences and the three constituting units: the Advanced Cultural Studies Institute of Sweden (ACSIS), the Department of Culture Studies (Tema Q), and the Swedish Cultural Policy Research Observatory (SweCult).Start-up support has also been received from the Bank of Sweden Tercentenary Foundation (Riksbankens Jubileumsfond).

The Future
Culture Unbound aims to be an active and reflecting part of the various worlds of cultural research.Conferences are events that effectively sum up contemporary currents in different fields of research and provide excellent opportunities to crystallise what later become journal articles or whole theme sections.The Association for Cultural Studies' (ACS, www.cultstud.org)biennial 'Crossroads in Cultural Studies' conference is a key example of this.Its last one, held in Hong Kong in the summer of 2010, will surely leave its mark on Culture Unbound.ACSIS also organises biennial conferences in the field, held in Norrköping, Sweden.'Culture~Nature', the 2009 conference, has inspired several of our latest and forthcoming releases.The forthcoming conference -'Current Issues in European Cultural Studies' -will be held on 15-17 June 2011 (www.isak.liu.se/acsis/conference-2011?l=sv).Its plenary sessions will deal with a number of central themes for current cultural studies, such as 'cosmopolitan', 'cosmic', 'chronotopic', and 'convergence' issues.A set of spotlight sessions cover cultural studies in all main European subregions, while more than thirty parallel group sessions together offer a unique glimpse of the main issues in cultural research in Europe today.A selection of themes will be transformed into future Culture Unbound contents.
The third and forthcoming annual volume will aspire to the same spirit of interdisciplinary and geographic diversity that has set the tone for the past year.'Fashion, Market and Materiality' (edited by Therese Andersson) is the first theme section for 2011, presenting a range of texts in this eminently contemporary area of research, which combines the study of fascinating new trends in visual culture with the theoretical challenges posed to traditional cultural studies by various positions that focus on the issue of materiality.
Later this spring, this will be followed by a second theme section -'Creativity Unbound: Policies, Governments and the Creative and Cultural Industries' edited by Can Seng Ooi and Birgit Stoeber.The third one, edited by Stefan Krankenhagen, will be published in the early autumn.It is preliminarily called 'Exhibiting Europe' and it will explore the ongoing production of a European narrative in exhibitions, museums, and collections.The last thematic section of Launched in June 2009, Culture Unbound has now published two complete volumes.The 2009 volume contained twenty-four articles (more than 500 pages), partly divided into two thematic sections: 'What's the Use of Cultural Research?' and 'City of Signs -Signs of the City'.In 2010, ambitions grew and Culture Unbound published forty-three articles, comprising more than 800 pages, and divided into five thematic sections: 'Surveillance'; 'Rural Media Spaces'; 'Culture, Work and Emotion'; 'Literary Public Spheres'; and 'Uses of the Past'.