The Glasgow Effect
The Glasgow Effect
A Tale of Class, Capitalism and Carbon Footprint
Ellie Harrison
ISBN: 1st Edition 9781912147960, 2nd Edition 9781910022795
Binding: paperback
1st Edition - Out of Stock, 2nd Edition - Temporarily out of stock
Back cover text:
How would your career, social life, family ties, carbon footprint and mental health be affected if you could not leave the city where you live?
Artist Ellie Harrison sparked a fast-and-furious debate about class, capitalism, art, education and much more, when news of her year-long project The Glasgow Effect went viral at the start of 2016.
Read a sample of The Glasgow Effect First Edition
Named after the term used to describe Glasgow’s mysteriously poor public health and funded to the tune of £15,000 by Creative Scotland, this controversial ‘durational performance’ centred on a simple proposition – that the artist would refuse to travel beyond Glasgow’s city limits, or use any vehicles except her bike, for a whole calendar year.
Includes 26 black and white illustrations.
It’s horrendously crass to parachute someone in on a poverty safari while local authorities are cutting finance to things like music tuition for Scotland’s poorest kids. I don’t know the artist personally but I think we’d all benefit more from an insight into what goes on in the minds of some of Scotland’s middle class. Darren McGarvey, Daily Record, January 2016
I’d already lived in Glasgow over seven years when the ‘chips hit the fan’ in January 2016. It was frustrating how the media took everything out of context. The Glasgow Effect was an epic undertaking resulting from years of research – a project which has shaped my thinking, action and life course ever since. This book is that hidden story. Ellie Harrison, March 2019
I can’t say that this book has been an easy undertaking, but it was a necessary one. I have emerged stronger and with more conviction than ever that in order to address the ‘climate emergency’ we must urgently reduce the amount we travel and the amount of energy we consume. Not least because a happy, healthy and sustainable life can and should result from committing and contributing to the community where you live. Ellie Harrison, The Glasgow Effect, July 2019
Quote from the Foreword to the Second Edition
‘This new edition is being published to coincide with cop26 – the 26th United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Conference of Parties (COP) held in Glasgow this November. As Glasgow City Council Leader Susan Aitken has said ‘this year, Glasgow is the world’s most talked about city’. It is a chance for Glasgow to become known by yet another short catchphrase. Not ‘the Glasgow miracle’, used to promote its cultural credentials within the artworld. Not ‘the Glasgow effect’ coined in 2008 to highlight our comparatively poor public health. But soon, perhaps, ‘the Glasgow agreement’ – a legally binding global treaty committing all nations of the world to tackle climate change before it’s too late.’
This new updated ‘green’ edition features a new Foreword written in light of the pandemic and in anticipation of COP26 in Glasgow, alongside a ‘Summary of Key Ideas’ re-framing the book as a handbook of ideas for activists and policy-makers working to transform towns and cities across Britain and beyond.
Find the New Online Bibliography here
Reviews & Media Coverage
So well done Ellie Harrison, take a bow you have produced a bold, vital and thoroughly researched piece of work and this should be stocked in every library, book shop and place of learning throughout the length and breadth of Scotland.
Keen on Goodreads, 2022
Watch Ellie’s TED talk on sustainability versus growth
Ellie Harrison’s project – her ‘extreme lifestyle experiment’ – is an anticipation of what’s to come. We will all have to relax our standards on what we regard as a legitimate or respectable ‘job’, as the new pieces of our socio-economic future settle... Harrison’s mix of occupational skills, community activism, education and self-expression – and her enthusiastic interest in how all these elements fit together – is going to be more and more the mainstream experience of ‘work’ in our societies. We should learn from her, and from the new wave of socially-engaged artists like her. Pat Kane, The National, January 2016
Brava to Ellie Harrison for continued integrity and conviction, as she uses her education, skills and (self-acknowledged) privileged position as an artist to challenge the failing economic status quo and ruffle the feathers of our corrupt, complacent establishment in Glasgow and beyond. Zara Kitson, Head of Community Engagement for Princes Trust Scotland, Facebook, January 2017
This is a most excellent book for anyone who is interested in public transport, local democracy, and seriously addressing the climate emergency and socio-economic inequality in the world. 5* Goodreads Reviewer
Ellie Harrison: Glasgow artist on a poverty safari? She better not forget the pith helmet. The Independent // Paid to Live Like Common People. The Daily Mail // Outraged over a £15,000 Glasgow art project? Look at the bigger picture. The Guardian // I’m a posh punchbag, says artist in Glasgow row. The Times // read all of this coverage from the original 2016 Glasgow Effect project and many more articles like them on Ellie’s website.
Contents of the Revised Edition
Extract from ‘Neoliberalism’ by Loki
Foreword to the Second Edition
Summary of Key Ideas
Preface
Introduction
Part 1: A Brief History of Neoliberalism
Chapter 1: Thatcher’s Children
Straight outta Compton
What the fuck is neoliberalism?
Social mobility isnae what they say
Waste not, want not
Major setback
Chapter 2: Creative Decade
Things can only get better
The knowledge economy
A golden age
Technologies of the self
Community vs career
Chapter 3: Welcome to Scotland
Dark clouds
Creative education
Bring back British Rail
Hedonism vs asceticism
Austerity politics
Long-distance love
Reality check
Chapter 4: Socialist Dystopia
Turning point
You are what you eat
System change, not climate change
Asceticism and the spirit of capitalism
Compromise and complicity are the new original sins
Progress trap
The leaky bucket
Worst inequalities in Western Europe
Settlers and colonists
First as tragedy, then as farce
Carbon graph
Part 2: The Glasgow Effect
Chapter 5: When the Chips Hit the Fan
Calm before the storm
I like Glasgow and Glasgow likes me
Facebook wormhole
The Divide
Small is Beautiful
Could there be a worse insult?
Chapter 6: Creative Destruction
But is it art?
Money can’t buy you love
Every human being is an artist
I’m as mad as hell, and I’m not going to take this anymore!
Career suicide
Where art and politics become one
Public property
Chapter 7: Lived Reality
Low-carbon lifestyle of the future
Citizen’s Basic Income
Biographic solutions to systemic contradictions
History, politics and vulnerability
The elephant in the room
Remunicipalisation!
Reflection and action
We need to stop ‘researching’ and start fighting!
Practising what we preach, preaching what we practise
Thrift radiates happiness
Hostile environments
The outsiders
Chapter 8: Aftershock
The end is the beginning
Impact agenda
The report
Homecoming
Worst nightmare
Part 3: The Sustainable City of the Future
Chapter 9: Think Global
Climate emergency
Downward mobility
Back to the future
Prosperity without growth
Deconsumerisation
Chapter 10: Act Local
City as a site for social change
Regional power
Community control
Fearless Cities
Non-material pathways out of poverty
Chapter 11: Universal Luxurious Services
Those things we all need to live happily and well
Public luxury
Localism and protectionism
Positive alternatives
Car-free future
Chapter 12: Travelling Without Moving
Equalising mobility
Minimising migration
Paradox of repopulation
Education for life, not for work
Rekindling our radical past
Love-hate relationship with the city
Acknowledgements
Endnotes