@article{4fcfd3f7d2884d43840562100686d86c,
title = "Can culture survive the marketplace?",
author = "Paul Dimaggio",
note = "Funding Information: During the twenty-five years between the demise of the New Deal WPA Arts Projects in the early 1940s and the establishment of the National Endowments for the Arts and the Humanities in 1965, federal support for the arts in the United States was virtually limited to the indirect yield of tax deductions for contributions to (and exemption from taxation of most revenues of) nonprofit arts organizations. Between its inception in 1965 This paper was prepared as a background document for the forum “Can Culture Survive the Marketplace?” which took place at the Institute of Politics of the John F. Kennedy School of Government of Harvard University, April 21, 1983, under the sponsorship of the Kennedy School and the Massachusetts Council on the Arts and Humanities. Jonathan Moore, Nancy Perkins, and Robert Solow provided helpful reactions to a memorandum used as the basis for the paper. I am grateful to Anthony Keller and John Simon for careful and astute editorial readings of an earlier draft; and to the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and the Yale Program on Non-Profit Organizations for support of research on which the paper is based. Nonetheless, the analysis and opinions expressed here are the author{\textquoteright}s alone, and are not necessarily shared by any of the persons or organizations to whom thanks are due.",
year = "1983",
doi = "10.1080/07335113.1983.9942078",
language = "English (US)",
volume = "13",
pages = "61--87",
journal = "Journal of Arts Management and Law",
issn = "0733-5113",
number = "1",
}