ELSEVIER Poetics 24 (1997) 393-414
POETICS
Globalization, organizational size,
and innovation in the French luxury fashion industry"
Production of culture theory revisited
Diana Crane
Sociology Department, School of Arts and Sciences, University of Pennsylvania,
3718 Locust Walk, Philadelphia, PA 19104-6299, USA
Abstract
According to production of culture theory, small organizations are more likely to produce
innovative cultural products than large organizations; large organizations constitute oligopo-
lies that control their markets and remain innovative by coopting smaller organizations, along
with their creative talent. A study of the French luxury fashion market shows that a few large
companies controlled by conglomerates dominate the market in terms of sales but have little
influence on styles. Rather than coopting smaller firms, large firms use the myth of the
designer as artist and connoisseur to enhance the saleabilityof products other than clothes,
although the designer is increasingly an employe rather than an owner or a manager. Whether
small finns influence styles depends on economic conditions that affect their capacity to com-
pete with larger firms. A factor that has been ignored by production of culture theory, the
increased cost of entry for new firms due to globalization of markets, inhibits their capacity
for innovation and survival. Examination of rankings of fashion innovativeness by fashion
experts over a period of seventeen years showed that, at the beginning of the period, when
costs of entry were relatively low and the number of competitors was relatively small, small
fh'ms were able to achieve recognition for their innovations. By the end of the period, the
same small firms, now grown to medium-size firms, were still influential, while new small
firms, competing with larger firms in a market where costs of entry were high, were less
likely to be perceived as innovative and may actually have been less innovative, since their
precarious financial situation precluded experimentation. Rather than coopting smaller firms,
large firms benefited from the global expansion of their market to sell products other than
fashionable clothing. Successful new firms were generally foreign and well-financed.
1. Introduction
The nature and role of recorded culture in contemporary society cannot be under-
stood without examining the characteristics of the organizations in which it is pro-
duced and disseminated. Production of culture theory which has generated a large
literature (for a review, see Peterson, 1994) focuses on the effects of different types
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