Skip to main content
Changing the culture of privilege
MIKE QUILLE argues the case for a radical shift away from the few to the many in funding and support for the arts, recreation and the media
ELOQUENT ADVOCATE: Caleb Femi, Young People’s Laureate for London, speaking at the House of Commons last year about how learning through arts and culture improves educational standards

“CULTURE is ordinary — that is where we must start,” Marxist writer and critic Raymond Williams once wrote. This means that culture includes not just the arts but much more. It embraces all those learned human activities which give life purpose, meaning and value and in which we engage for enjoyment, entertainment and enlightenment.

As well as the arts, culture includes sport, religion, eating and drinking, fashion and clothing, education, the media and many other popular activities. Fundamentally, cultural activities are social, unifying and egalitarian. They assert our common humanity and solidarity against divisions of class, gender, race and other social divisions caused by capitalism.

And cultural activities, especially art, can directly inspire and support radical change in the real world.

Morning Star call for advertising
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
C&C
Report / 5 November 2024
5 November 2024
MIKE QUILL reports on a lively conference in Barnsley that took stock of working-class access to culture and proposed strategies to embed culture within the trade union movement
England
Theatre Review / 10 August 2023
10 August 2023
MIKE QUILLE relishes political theatre at its most entertaining, engaging and effective
DEVASTATINGLY EFFECTIVE: (Left) Francisco Goya’s The Disas
BOOKS / 16 May 2021
16 May 2021
MIKE QUILLE is impressed by the rigorous Marxist approach to be found in a new book on the dialectics of art
portrait
Interview / 7 November 2020
7 November 2020
ADAM THERON-LEE RENSCH talks to Mike Quille about what it is to be a working-class writer in the US and patronising perceptions of class that abound left, right and centre