“…Peck, 2004;Pratt, 2009; for a summary see Bell & Oakley, 2015), including the ways in which creative city discourses are performative, marking off and marginalising "other" places as "non-creative" by definition (Waitt & Gibson, 2009). Interest in revealing and restoring other places as sites of cultural production and creative activity has revived accordingly, and includes research on different urban sites (Bell & Jayne, 2004), the countryside (Bell & Jayne, 2010;Luckman, 2012) and other spaces of "vernacular creativity" (Edensor, Leslie, Millington, & Rantisi, 2009). Yet, a noticeable feature of much interest in either para-or peri-urban activity in policy is its focus on a narrow, almost stereotypical, conception of the kinds of cultural participation and value that do and might exist beyond the city (Bell & Jayne, 2010).…”