“…Within economic geography, 'clusters' and 'communities of practice' have been key imaginaries for understanding the complex role of proximities in knowledge production and innovation (Amin and Roberts, 2008;Bathelt et al, 2004;Malmberg and Power, 2005;Wenger, 1999). The fragile nature of these collaborations (Grabher, 2002a;2002b) continues to be of interest, with increasing focus on temporary events (Bathelt and Schuldt, 2008;Müller and Stewart, 2014;Power and Jansson, 2009); 'projects' (Hansen, 2015;Watson, 2012), 'networks' (Bathelt and Turi, 2011;Grabher and Ibert, 2014;Lowe et al, 2012;Müller, 2015) and 'intermediaries' (Jakob and Van Heur 2015). Through the example of creative writers' artistic knowledge, I contend that the vocabulary of co-production builds on and extends understandings of collaboration as temporary, fragile and with multiple spatial forms.…”