
From Unspeakability to Inequality Talk: Why Conversations about Inequalities May Not Lead to Change
Author(s) -
Christina Scharff
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
open library of humanities
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2056-6700
DOI - 10.16995/olh.4674
Subject(s) - inequality , ideology , sociology , rhetorical question , acknowledgement , privilege (computing) , politics , field (mathematics) , epistemology , political science , linguistics , law , computer science , pure mathematics , mathematical analysis , philosophy , mathematics , computer security
This article draws on eighteen qualitative in-depth interviews with female, early-career classical musicians to investigate if, and if so in which ways, recent discourse around the lack of diversity in the classical music profession has affected how young musicians talk about inequalities in the field of classical music. The article demonstrates that the research participants were aware of ongoing inequalities and discussed them openly. This marks an important shift from previously conducted research, which highlighted the ‘unspeakability’ of inequalities in the classical music profession and the cultural and creative industries. By drawing on discursive psychology, this article explores the rhetorical and ideological work that such ‘inequality talk’ performs, arguing that conversations about inequalities do not necessarily lead to political change. Divided into three analytical sections, the article demonstrates that inequality talk can become an end in itself, rather than a means to an end (such as political change); that a fatalist sentiment can characterise discussions of inequalities, presenting structural change as unachievable; and that acknowledgement and recognition of privilege, crucial to overcoming inequalities, is not a consistent feature of inequality talk, which in turn risks reinforcing the normativity of whiteness and middle-classness in the field of classical music. Overall, the article provides a detailed analysis of recently collected empirical data to caution against overly optimistic accounts of the shift towards a more open discussion of inequalities in the classical music profession and beyond.