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Barry JenkinsChaos and confusion marked the award for best picture at the 2017 Oscar ceremony.Moonlight, a film made by a black filmmaker that placed at its centre the normally marginalised experiences of black gay men, was initially not announced as the winner. Rather, due to an error by the consultancy tasked with organising the envelopes, La La Land, a tribute to a bygone age of Hollywood musicals, was initially presented with the award. In the quotation above, Moonlight's director Barry Jenkins narrates his sense of disorientation at the announcement. His words also betray a sense of being out of place or in a dream at the idea of winning Academy Awards for a marginalised story by a filmmaker from a marginalised sector of the American population. That moment distils many of the themes of our special issue, which looks at the exclusions and inequalities within the cultural and creative industries, and how these inequalities relate to broader social divisions."If you can't see it, you can't be it". This well-worn phrase has underpinned a flurry of recent controversies around the cultural industries that have become persistent and wide ranging across almost every part of the sector. There are numerous examples: outrage at the stubborn racial and gender inequalities in the cinema and video games industries, captured by #oscarssowhite and #gamergate; the media and online debates over accusations of whitewashing of leading Asian characters in blockbuster films Dr Strange and Ghost in the Shell; Kim Gordon's comments on the two steps forward, one step back experience of women in the popular music industry; the controversial resignation of Emma Rice from the Shakespeare's Globe Theatre in London; and the assertions and counter claims as to the benefits, particularly over pay rates and access to parts, of privileged backgrounds for those working in British theatre.