Speaker:

Esther Lisk-Carew: There is a through line of telling narratives, telling stories,

Speaker:

getting data about the people coming into you, that has been part of my work.

Speaker:

Some people suit a portmanteau career really well.

Speaker:

Certainly those who have cultural and creative practice themselves.

Speaker:

It feels like a comedy answer, but when the Buffy reboot comes out, I

Speaker:

want Giles to no longer be a librarian, but to be an academic researcher.

Speaker:

Nothing makes a career look sexier and cool than having a hot person

Speaker:

on a hit TV show doing that job.

Sarah McLusky:

Hello there.

Sarah McLusky:

I'm Sarah McLusky and this is Research Adjacent.

Sarah McLusky:

Each episode I talk to amazing research adjacent professionals about what

Sarah McLusky:

they do and why it makes a difference.

Sarah McLusky:

Keep listening to find out why we think the research adjacent space

Sarah McLusky:

is where the real magic happens.

Sarah McLusky:

Hello there and welcome or welcome back to the Research Adjacent podcast.

Sarah McLusky:

Before I introduce today's guest, I just wanted to thank you for

Sarah McLusky:

choosing to share your day with me.

Sarah McLusky:

If you're on LinkedIn, maybe you could share a photo of

Sarah McLusky:

where you are listening from.

Sarah McLusky:

I know that we have listeners all over the world, so I would honestly be thrilled

Sarah McLusky:

to see what you can see right now.

Sarah McLusky:

If you do, make sure that you tag me, Sarah McLusky, and the

Sarah McLusky:

podcast page Research Adjacent.

Sarah McLusky:

So back to today's guest.

Sarah McLusky:

We are returning from a short summer break with a fantastic guest who has like

Sarah McLusky:

many cultural professionals, has pieced together a career doing what she loves.

Sarah McLusky:

Esther Lisk-Carew coordinates the AHEAD program at Manchester

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Metropolitan University.

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AHEAD stands for Arts and Humanities Engagement and Dialogue, and her

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role includes projects like a crime and justice film festival and the

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experimental arts series Bunker Talks.

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Although it was this role at MMU that brought Esther into my world.

Sarah McLusky:

In prepping the show notes, I have discovered that she was

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nominated for the Manchester People's Cultural Award in 2024.

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She won the Volunteer Leader of the Year Award in 2021, and that she has

Sarah McLusky:

also been a contestant on the Weakest Link, Pointless and Mastermind.

Sarah McLusky:

Esther is also no stranger to podcasting, and through her Linktree

Sarah McLusky:

in the show notes, she can find a series that she created in 2020

Sarah McLusky:

called Well Spoken Tokens, exploring diversity in the cultural sector.

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On top of all of this, Esther also does freelance work, is a trustee of

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Manchester's Portico Library and also the founder of the Black and Global

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Majority Cultural Creative Network.

Sarah McLusky:

I am starting to wonder if Esther ever sleeps.

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In our conversation, we talk about how engagement in the arts and humanities is

Sarah McLusky:

often baked into the research process, her career journey, which includes a leisurely

Sarah McLusky:

detour via the French legal system and why she would use her Research Adjacent magic

Sarah McLusky:

wand to rework Buffy the Vampire Slayer.

Sarah McLusky:

Yes, really.

Sarah McLusky:

Listen on to hear about that and the rest of Esther's story.

Sarah McLusky:

Welcome along to the podcast.

Sarah McLusky:

Esther, it is fantastic to have you here.

Sarah McLusky:

I wonder if we could begin by hearing a little bit about

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who you are and what you do.

Sarah McLusky:

Esther Lisk-Carew: Thank you very much for having me, Sarah.

Sarah McLusky:

So my name's Esther Lisk-Carew.

Sarah McLusky:

I am the engagement coordinator for a programme called Ahead at

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Manchester Metropolitan University and ahead stands for Arts and

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Humanities Engagement and Dialogue.

Sarah McLusky:

So it is the public engagement programme that helps our research academics in

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arts and humanities tell their stories, talk about their research, and connect

Sarah McLusky:

with audiences, public, academics, people beyond the university here.

Sarah McLusky:

So it's a really broad remit but it's a really interesting role.

Sarah McLusky:

Yeah, I bet it is.

Sarah McLusky:

And I think it's fantastic to have you on as a guest because I think people

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often think about public engagement as and also research as well as being

Sarah McLusky:

about science subjects, engineering, technology, things like that.

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So tell us a bit about what sorts of things you're involved

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with in Arts and Humanities.

Sarah McLusky:

Esther Lisk-Carew: Arts and humanities because it's such a

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broad stretch of subjects, so it's the School of Architecture,

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it's sociology, it's English, it's history, it's a school of theatre.

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One of the things I sometimes struggle with is just doing it in a nutshell, but

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some of the projects that we've worked on are people in linguistics talking about

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social justice and how teachers how they might influence the ways in which academic

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learning is changed by looking at the ways in which they're teaching, what they're

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teaching, what's in the curriculum.

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So linguistics is really interesting.

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We've got the school of theatre.

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We've recently had one of our academics in the School of theatre

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who's had a production that's part of Manchester International Festival.

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It's a show called Liberation.

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Which talks to the Pan-African Congress that happened in Manchester in 1945.

Sarah McLusky:

So it's interesting because quite a lot of people think about research outputs

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in terms of papers and conferences, and those are things that happen.

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But also there is nothing greater than having something, which one of the

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outputs of your research is a play that gets to engage hundreds of people a

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night on the subject of your researching this particular part of history and the

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impacts and legacies of this Congress that happened just after the war and so

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few people in Manchester, it's the 80th -anniversary this year, know much about

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that history, so it's really incredible that we have got people who are doing that

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research around who were these people?

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Why weren't their stories told at the time?

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Who were the women involved in telling their stories?

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Because quite often they get written out history.

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It's just such a really broad range of research areas.

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We've got people doing design for dementia, so collaborative working to

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talk about how if you co-design a game that helps people who are suffering with

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dementia access their memories, does it put off long-term adverse health outputs?

Sarah McLusky:

We've got our Robotics Living lab.

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I could talk for hours about the Robotics Living Lab, which is an amazing

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project, which is from this school of Fashion, which is around working with

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people who are in industry, who have got small fashion businesses and how

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can robotics help and support them as small businesses, so amazing amount of

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research happening in the university.

Sarah McLusky:

That does sound like a huge range of stuff, but it's also

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reminding me of the fact that sometimes I think the reason that people don't

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necessarily think of public engagement as being something that happens in the

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arts and humanities is because often it's something that's almost baked in

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to the way that they operate, isn't it?

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So like you say, you've got theatre studies of course they're gonna do plays.

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And then of course they're gonna have an audience for those plays.

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So it can be very much, I think, much more part of the process than in the sciences.

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Is that something that you've noticed?

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Esther Lisk-Carew: Absolutely.

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The collaborative methodology coworking, co-producing.

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Working with different audiences to develop practice?

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I think a lot of those techniques and methodologies that people are

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encouraged to try and start using in other industries and in other academic

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areas do tend to already be used.

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So sometimes you are not doing it as new.

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You are talking about the ways in which you did it, or you are having

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a conference or a symposium about the different ways that people have done it

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differently or evolved that practice.

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Rather than going, oh no, I need to think about how I engage with young people who

Sarah McLusky:

are affected by the scientific outcome and I dunno how to engage that in audience.

Sarah McLusky:

Whereas actually, if we're talking about youth voices and justice.

Sarah McLusky:

We're already working with young people 'cause they're part of those

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case studies and that way of working.

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And then the research outputs are probably more along the lines of how are we going

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to do quantitative data attached to that.

Sarah McLusky:

So yeah, I think it's yeah, different lenses, different strands.

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The starting points are different.

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But I don't mentally think of it as distinct from a STEM subject, in

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terms of the way they do the research.

Sarah McLusky:

It is the different types of research outputs I think are more common

Sarah McLusky:

with arts and humanities sometimes.

Sarah McLusky:

Yes, what I think in the next REF cycle, they're

Sarah McLusky:

calling non-traditional outputs.

Sarah McLusky:

Although you could argue that in some of these disciplines, these are actually

Sarah McLusky:

very traditional outputs, couldn't you?

Sarah McLusky:

Esther Lisk-Carew: Yeah.

Sarah McLusky:

I think it's non-traditional in the way REF looks at outputs.

Sarah McLusky:

It's not non-traditional in working practice.

Sarah McLusky:

Yes.

Sarah McLusky:

Yeah.

Sarah McLusky:

Oh, it sounds like a, an amazing range of things that are happening there.

Sarah McLusky:

So how did you find yourself in this role?

Sarah McLusky:

Tell us a bit about your story.

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Esther Lisk-Carew: Oh, it's, I've had a really varied career,

Sarah McLusky:

which is, I've been very lucky.

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I've worked mainly in arts festival and venue operations.

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I've sometimes specialised in things like volunteer management and so

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that's been in the cultural sector for about 20 odd years, a little bit over.

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Where I would, I started out as the film administrator in independent cinema.

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One of the things I really loved was that there was a really strong

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festival programme throughout the year.

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So it was a place called Corner House, which is now morphed into a

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different organisation called HOME.

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But there used to be film festivals all the time, so it was logistical, it

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was getting speakers, getting people from around the world, getting films

Sarah McLusky:

from all around the world, bringing people together, telling stories.

Sarah McLusky:

There is a through line of telling narratives, telling stories, getting

Sarah McLusky:

data about the people coming into you, that has been part of my work.

Sarah McLusky:

And then working with volunteers in the heritage sector and in the art sector.

Sarah McLusky:

You do a lot of data collection when you work with volunteer teams

Sarah McLusky:

because you always, these are people who don't have to work with you.

Sarah McLusky:

Yeah.

Sarah McLusky:

So you are always looking at ways you can continually motivate them, make

Sarah McLusky:

sure you're not doing a load of staff recruitment, staff retention, volunteer

Sarah McLusky:

recruitment, volunteer retention, having discussions with producers about

Sarah McLusky:

how volunteers could be used in an interesting way to really engage them.

Sarah McLusky:

So again, similarly the to working in arts and humanities research.

Sarah McLusky:

You have these different ways of working with people that actually

Sarah McLusky:

go a lot deeper than I think a lot of people think when they think,

Sarah McLusky:

oh, you're a volunteer manager.

Sarah McLusky:

Oh, you're a venue manager.

Sarah McLusky:

You're doing, yes, a lot of the nuts and bolts things.

Sarah McLusky:

But a lot of it is actually responding to data, learning, doing better,

Sarah McLusky:

evaluating, and then trying to repeat that process again through

Sarah McLusky:

trial, process of elimination.

Sarah McLusky:

So there are parallels to working in an art sector.

Sarah McLusky:

But then this role came up at the university.

Sarah McLusky:

One of the things I've always found with arts and heritage is a lot of

Sarah McLusky:

roles are tied to things like Arts Council funding or HLF funding,

Sarah McLusky:

Heritage Lottery Fund funding.

Sarah McLusky:

So it's quite unstable in terms of career progression.

Sarah McLusky:

A lot of times I've done quite fixed term contracts, whether

Sarah McLusky:

that's a couple of years.

Sarah McLusky:

And so you deliver a project or deliver some activity and

Sarah McLusky:

you might not necessarily have the same job or it evolves.

Sarah McLusky:

So being within the university setting, being able to deliver things, but actually

Sarah McLusky:

having a little bit more robustness.

Sarah McLusky:

The period of REF is I think it's nine years.

Sarah McLusky:

And my role was a relatively new one.

Sarah McLusky:

They hadn't really looked at how engagement specifically fed into

Sarah McLusky:

impact case studies, but obviously if you are looking at impact, who is

Sarah McLusky:

coming along, what audiences you are reaching, how you are reaching them

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is a really important part of that.

Sarah McLusky:

So I feel really lucky that the university had gone from doing

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much more around its research and thinking about its research culture.

Sarah McLusky:

And I just got very lucky that there was this role that really matched my

Sarah McLusky:

skillset at a time when Manchester Metropolitan was really looking at how

Sarah McLusky:

does their research impact the world.

Sarah McLusky:

It sounds like it makes sense the way that you've

Sarah McLusky:

brought together all these different things that you've done before

Sarah McLusky:

into this role that you do now.

Sarah McLusky:

And as you say, I can see definite connections with having done events

Sarah McLusky:

management and then that being applicable to like the public engagement type stuff.

Sarah McLusky:

And also, as you say, around volunteer management and the fact,

Sarah McLusky:

I think there's definite parallels between managing volunteers and doing

Sarah McLusky:

things in public engagement because I think, again, it's like these

Sarah McLusky:

people, they don't have to be there.

Sarah McLusky:

Yeah.

Sarah McLusky:

They're choosing to be there and then how you actually interact

Sarah McLusky:

with them and how understand why.

Sarah McLusky:

Yeah.

Sarah McLusky:

Esther Lisk-Carew: Sorry, understanding motivation, but also

Sarah McLusky:

holding that motivation to come and reengage with you over and again.

Sarah McLusky:

Yeah.

Sarah McLusky:

I do think that is a consistent thing within different applications

Sarah McLusky:

of my work over the years.

Sarah McLusky:

Yeah.

Sarah McLusky:

Esther Lisk-Carew: But also I was really lucky because the organisation,

Sarah McLusky:

the cultural organisations I've worked in, I've worked in some of the larger

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cultural organisations in Greater Manchester, are ones where when I was

Sarah McLusky:

doing those sort of entry level jobs and early career jobs, a lot of my

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colleagues were people who were working in the cultural and creative industry.

Sarah McLusky:

Now coincidentally lecturers at the university that I currently work in.

Sarah McLusky:

It's really interesting because it's good to see them develop from

Sarah McLusky:

being artists to being people who are now teaching people and being

Sarah McLusky:

lecturers and then being researchers.

Sarah McLusky:

And so it is interesting to see how their careers have developed and also, I think

Sarah McLusky:

my role, it's not one that's consistently available in a lot of universities or,

Sarah McLusky:

there's not always consistently this role in the way that it's presented.

Sarah McLusky:

And it certainly isn't a role when I was at school thinking about

Sarah McLusky:

what do I want to do with my life?

Sarah McLusky:

What kind of career do I want to have?

Sarah McLusky:

What kind of life do I wanna have?

Sarah McLusky:

But it's really interesting role to have for someone who's interested in

Sarah McLusky:

arts and culture, but I'm not an artist.

Sarah McLusky:

I've never been an artistic practitioner, but I've always been interested in how

Sarah McLusky:

things tell stories and how things happen.

Sarah McLusky:

It's a really excellent job to combine my love and interest, I love learning.

Sarah McLusky:

I look, I'm a huge nerd.

Sarah McLusky:

So learning about all of the different academic disciplines and

Sarah McLusky:

different bits of research, me, I could go on a real deep dive on them.

Sarah McLusky:

Yeah.

Sarah McLusky:

And I find it much, I find it easier to do my job the more I know about the research.

Sarah McLusky:

So sometimes they'll be like, oh, I want to do this conference, this event.

Sarah McLusky:

Help me with that.

Sarah McLusky:

The more I know about the research, the more I'm like, actually this is

Sarah McLusky:

an audience that I think you might not have connected with before, but actually

Sarah McLusky:

they would also be someone you would want to bring into the university or

Sarah McLusky:

we go out from the university for them.

Sarah McLusky:

So I think having worked in cultural sector brings a really

Sarah McLusky:

different perspective to the academic audiences as well.

Sarah McLusky:

You said there that you, this isn't something you aspire

Sarah McLusky:

to do when you were at school.

Sarah McLusky:

I'm thinking that again, is pretty, these jobs, I don't even know if they

Sarah McLusky:

like, they, I'm pretty sure they didn't even exist when we were at school.

Sarah McLusky:

What did you aspire to do when you were at school?

Sarah McLusky:

Esther Lisk-Carew: I think you've seen my IMDB, which this is the big,

Sarah McLusky:

I often have to explain to people, particularly when I'm mentoring people

Sarah McLusky:

about how you can change careers.

Sarah McLusky:

So originally I wanted to be a French judge, so I went

Sarah McLusky:

very academic, grammar school.

Sarah McLusky:

And a lot of people at my school either went to Oxford or Cambridge

Sarah McLusky:

and went into medicine and law, and those were, the marks of success.

Sarah McLusky:

You got a really high profile kind of accountancy, those kinds of jobs.

Sarah McLusky:

And I loved to talk and I loved to read and I loved languages, and so me

Sarah McLusky:

thinking I'm not sciencey, I'm not gonna go into medicine or something like that.

Sarah McLusky:

I wanted to be a lawyer.

Sarah McLusky:

And then I specifically had a really great a level French teacher,

Sarah McLusky:

and I thought I love France.

Sarah McLusky:

I love law.

Sarah McLusky:

I'll be a French lawyer.

Sarah McLusky:

And there's only two places.

Sarah McLusky:

There were only two places in the UK at the time where you could

Sarah McLusky:

go on and do your legal studies with a full qualifying law degree.

Sarah McLusky:

Yeah.

Sarah McLusky:

So one of them was, was Kent.

Sarah McLusky:

Think it was Kent.

Sarah McLusky:

And then one of them was the University of Liverpool where I

Sarah McLusky:

ended up going and then but I'd always loved film, I'd loved theatre.

Sarah McLusky:

I love arts and culture.

Sarah McLusky:

I've loved reading all my life.

Sarah McLusky:

And then when it came to doing this degree, I found it incredibly interesting.

Sarah McLusky:

But I was also a bit of an idealist who wanted to change the world.

Sarah McLusky:

And the more you study law, from my perspective, I didn't feel like I'd be

Sarah McLusky:

changing the world by becoming a lawyer.

Sarah McLusky:

I'd probably just be enforcing other people's laws and

Sarah McLusky:

other people's decisions.

Sarah McLusky:

So I had to rethink what I actively wanted to do in my life.

Sarah McLusky:

And I realised I didn't want to be a lawyer, but I also

Sarah McLusky:

didn't know what I wanted to do.

Sarah McLusky:

I worked in the NHS for a while doing some project administration work as

Sarah McLusky:

a temp and then got a permanent job.

Sarah McLusky:

But again, it wasn't something that excited me about

Sarah McLusky:

getting up in the morning.

Sarah McLusky:

Then I saw this film administration job and it was two things, I was

Sarah McLusky:

passionate about arts and film, and I was a great administrator.

Sarah McLusky:

I was really good at looking at data and spreadsheets and pulling things

Sarah McLusky:

together and staying organised.

Sarah McLusky:

And then that then converted into a love, particularly of festivals,

Sarah McLusky:

but also heritage and the ways in which they can tell stories and

Sarah McLusky:

connect with audiences, which then developed into a career in an academic

Sarah McLusky:

setting helping people tell stories.

Sarah McLusky:

And it's funny how when we look back, sometimes we can connect

Sarah McLusky:

the dots, even though at the time it, it feels a little bit random and haphazard.

Sarah McLusky:

Esther Lisk-Carew: Yeah.

Sarah McLusky:

I mean it comes full circle.

Sarah McLusky:

Both with me having worked in a film team at a cinema and with me having

Sarah McLusky:

to originally wanted to be a lawyer.

Sarah McLusky:

One of the projects I worked on I helped support our crime and justice

Sarah McLusky:

film festival, which our sociology team put together every year.

Sarah McLusky:

So that combines everything I love, a film festival, amazing series of events.

Sarah McLusky:

And, looking at how does, how is the justice system depicted on films?

Sarah McLusky:

What specific laws are influenced by film?

Sarah McLusky:

I know I was, I desperately wanted to put a film festival on years ago about

Sarah McLusky:

just films that had changed the law and the idea that I'm now in an institution

Sarah McLusky:

that showing all of these different aspects of the law, which I do still find

Sarah McLusky:

incredibly interesting and fascinating.

Sarah McLusky:

It's great.

Sarah McLusky:

Yeah.

Sarah McLusky:

Oh, it does.

Sarah McLusky:

The enthusiasm is definitely coming over of how much you're

Sarah McLusky:

enjoying what you're doing now.

Sarah McLusky:

So you've mentioned quite a few different projects and things you've worked on.

Sarah McLusky:

I know it's hard sometimes to pick favorites, but are there any particular

Sarah McLusky:

ones that you're really proud of that you'd like to tell us about?

Sarah McLusky:

Esther Lisk-Carew: I really liked the recent collaboration we did, which

Sarah McLusky:

there's an existing public engagement programme from the school of theatre

Sarah McLusky:

and the performance research group here called Bunker Talks, which is

Sarah McLusky:

researchers just, formally, informally, sorry, sitting and talking about what

Sarah McLusky:

they do, why they do what they do.

Sarah McLusky:

And I love a talk, I love an event.

Sarah McLusky:

So it existing already, but being able to collaborate with them around this most

Sarah McLusky:

recent one, which was with Liberation, it connected the geography of the

Sarah McLusky:

building that the school of theatre is in because it's a part of history that

Sarah McLusky:

actually took place in that building.

Sarah McLusky:

That one was really special.

Sarah McLusky:

It's also a bit of black history, which is very important to me personally.

Sarah McLusky:

But also really love untold stories.

Sarah McLusky:

Yeah, I think the Bunker Talk series and also it's traditionally held in

Sarah McLusky:

space that's not physically accessible.

Sarah McLusky:

And being able to move that into another space so that more people

Sarah McLusky:

can see that there are these spaces in the building is really special.

Sarah McLusky:

Which is sad because then it reminds me of another event that we recently supported

Sarah McLusky:

called Mother Tongue Other Tongue, which was with Manchester Poetry Library which

Sarah McLusky:

again, is a public space that a lot of people think because it's attached

Sarah McLusky:

to the university they can't come to.

Sarah McLusky:

And it had loads of school children involved, and that was another one

Sarah McLusky:

because anyone who goes into the Poetry Library falls in love with it instantly.

Sarah McLusky:

And it was an amazing number of people getting to showcase their home languages

Sarah McLusky:

through poetry which is just beautiful.

Sarah McLusky:

You never, any event that involves young people, that involves

Sarah McLusky:

people learning really young to be passionate about art and culture,

Sarah McLusky:

that's always a big winner for me.

Sarah McLusky:

Yeah.

Sarah McLusky:

There's a lot of energy you get from doing stuff.

Sarah McLusky:

I used to do loads of events with young people and yeah it is a special kind of

Sarah McLusky:

energy and enthusiasm that they bring.

Sarah McLusky:

Esther Lisk-Carew: Yeah.

Sarah McLusky:

Especially when it's their voices starting it rather than being told what to do.

Sarah McLusky:

And have that imposed on them.

Sarah McLusky:

I think nurturing that self-awareness of what it is that you want to do, whether

Sarah McLusky:

it's misguided, whether it's amazingly idealistic, I think it's really important

Sarah McLusky:

to cultivate that sense at a young age.

Sarah McLusky:

Yeah, definitely.

Sarah McLusky:

And you said there a bit earlier on that another thing you've been involved with

Sarah McLusky:

is mentoring people around career change.

Sarah McLusky:

Tell us a bit more about that.

Sarah McLusky:

Esther Lisk-Carew: So one of the things I've always done as a sideline in my

Sarah McLusky:

career is, and particularly when you're working with volunteers, because, a

Sarah McLusky:

huge pool of volunteers in a city like Manchester are students who are looking

Sarah McLusky:

at career development and how you make money being an artist or being in the

Sarah McLusky:

creative and cultural sector because there aren't the traditional routes, it's

Sarah McLusky:

not as linear as the law, for example.

Sarah McLusky:

So I really enjoy that aspect of working with people to speak up for themselves,

Sarah McLusky:

develop their careers, understand how to talk about themselves because again, I

Sarah McLusky:

was really lucky at my secondary school we were taught how to do interviews

Sarah McLusky:

because it was expected that we'd go out and, be very impressive all the time.

Sarah McLusky:

And I don't, it's not as consistent now.

Sarah McLusky:

I think at secondary education, giving people those skill sets to talk about

Sarah McLusky:

their skills, set themselves apart.

Sarah McLusky:

I think a lot of education these days just seem to be towards conformity.

Sarah McLusky:

Creative sectors are all about being individual and showcasing

Sarah McLusky:

that thing that's special about yourself, whilst understanding

Sarah McLusky:

that you have a skill set to prove.

Sarah McLusky:

Yeah.

Sarah McLusky:

But talk about that.

Sarah McLusky:

So I really like working with young people in particular to help them develop skills.

Sarah McLusky:

Yeah.

Sarah McLusky:

Oh, that's really interesting.

Sarah McLusky:

I think you're right, is that a lot of.

Sarah McLusky:

What young people it is about passing exams.

Sarah McLusky:

It's about, fitting into this little box.

Sarah McLusky:

But yeah, the fact that in the arts it's actually, it's about how do you

Sarah McLusky:

stand out rather than how do you fit in.

Sarah McLusky:

Esther Lisk-Carew: Yeah.

Sarah McLusky:

And I think one of the things you are really focused on the subject specific

Sarah McLusky:

thing when you do your university degree but you're not focused on how do I

Sarah McLusky:

translate having worked on a hundred shows to going into an office whilst

Sarah McLusky:

I'm doing my office job or going into a retail setting to do a retail job, whilst

Sarah McLusky:

I'm also building up my career or how do I have the skill sets to work within a

Sarah McLusky:

theatre setting, that's not necessarily, I am doing a producer role straight away.

Sarah McLusky:

Mm-hmm.

Sarah McLusky:

Actually, I've got to learn how to work in the marketing team and convey messages

Sarah McLusky:

and be able to tell stories succinctly and interestingly, and reach audiences.

Sarah McLusky:

Yeah.

Sarah McLusky:

And as you say, there it is.

Sarah McLusky:

We don't often talk a lot about this, do we?

Sarah McLusky:

There's a lot of talk in higher education about, precarity of researchers and

Sarah McLusky:

things like that, but actually work in the arts and cultural sector can

Sarah McLusky:

be incredibly, precarious, can't it?

Sarah McLusky:

And short contracts, self-employed, temporary jobs, all that sort of

Sarah McLusky:

stuff, even though these sectors make massive contribution to the economy.

Sarah McLusky:

So yeah what's your experience been like of navigating those waters?

Sarah McLusky:

Esther Lisk-Carew: I think that's it.

Sarah McLusky:

I think one of the things I've learned from experience and that I try and imbue

Sarah McLusky:

is that to navigate precarity, one of the things is having a broad skillset and

Sarah McLusky:

being flexible, being good at managing your own time and your boundaries, because

Sarah McLusky:

it can fall into a space where you are trying to do so many things just to

Sarah McLusky:

pay the rent, that you will say yes to everything and not be able to go actually

Sarah McLusky:

this is the thing I want out this role.

Sarah McLusky:

It's probably not paying me that much, but it's giving me a certain

Sarah McLusky:

skillset or a certain network of people I've got access to.

Sarah McLusky:

So I think helping people to understand that there's a point at which you

Sarah McLusky:

can say no is really important.

Sarah McLusky:

And that whilst precarity is to be expected, you can ask for more in certain

Sarah McLusky:

spaces and if you know you're going into a precarious situation, that's great.

Sarah McLusky:

That's the level of energy that you can give to it that is appropriate

Sarah McLusky:

to the level of precarity.

Sarah McLusky:

If they want you for that firm amount of time or for longer, then they should

Sarah McLusky:

be building that in to support you.

Sarah McLusky:

And organisations that do that well are really great at retaining people.

Sarah McLusky:

And probably, although I've never yet to see the research and the data will

Sarah McLusky:

consistently deliver those greater kind of cultural outcomes for their work.

Sarah McLusky:

Yeah, that's interesting.

Sarah McLusky:

Like you say, perhaps nobody's actually connecting the dots and counting it.

Sarah McLusky:

But it makes sense that people who you treat people well and they stay

Sarah McLusky:

Esther Lisk-Carew: There are people who are doing that data.

Sarah McLusky:

I read reports from Creative UK who look at the cultural

Sarah McLusky:

sector and cultural working.

Sarah McLusky:

There's a lot more work now being done to look at the cultural economy around

Sarah McLusky:

freelancers and zero hours contracts and formalizing some of that practice.

Sarah McLusky:

I think because they're cultural organisations, they don't fall

Sarah McLusky:

more into practice research and not necessarily having a standard model

Sarah McLusky:

for everyone who does the same thing because they won't work in the same

Sarah McLusky:

way in different organisations.

Sarah McLusky:

But the more and more there is actual data to firm it up now, which is

Sarah McLusky:

great because that's really important.

Sarah McLusky:

Yes.

Sarah McLusky:

And as you say, that just helps people to forge, even if it's a

Sarah McLusky:

career made up of lots of bits and pieces, but at least a sense that

Sarah McLusky:

there is some kind of career there.

Sarah McLusky:

There's some kind of structure to it.

Sarah McLusky:

Esther Lisk-Carew: Yeah.

Sarah McLusky:

Yeah.

Sarah McLusky:

And some people suit a portmanteau career really well.

Sarah McLusky:

Yeah.

Sarah McLusky:

Certainly those who have cultural and creative practice themselves,

Sarah McLusky:

a lot of them, it is great for them to be able to do part-time, maybe in

Sarah McLusky:

a university part-time, doing their own practice, traveling the world.

Sarah McLusky:

Yeah.

Sarah McLusky:

Esther Lisk-Carew: So yeah, you can see now that there are careers where

Sarah McLusky:

people really thrive doing that work.

Sarah McLusky:

Yeah.

Sarah McLusky:

Yeah, it's great that it's options.

Sarah McLusky:

Something for everybody.

Sarah McLusky:

So I do like to ask all of my guests this question, which is, if you had

Sarah McLusky:

a magic wand, what would you change about the world that you work in?

Sarah McLusky:

Esther Lisk-Carew: Oh, wow.

Sarah McLusky:

Okay.

Sarah McLusky:

I thought about this.

Sarah McLusky:

I have two ones.

Sarah McLusky:

Two is okay, i'll let you have two.

Sarah McLusky:

Esther Lisk-Carew: I'm a black woman working in a sector that is

Sarah McLusky:

historically underrepresented with people of color and particularly

Sarah McLusky:

black people in positions of power.

Sarah McLusky:

So I go to a lot of meetings and a lot of the time I will be the only person there.

Sarah McLusky:

I used to do a thing called the Count where I go into a meeting and literally

Sarah McLusky:

just physically count how many other people in the room A spoke or B didn't

Sarah McLusky:

just look like a one homogenised look so always I like seeing more

Sarah McLusky:

people who look like me and more variety, just generally in the world.

Sarah McLusky:

So in the sector, the more and more I see that happier and happier I

Sarah McLusky:

get and it does, it has changed since I entered the world of work

Sarah McLusky:

and it is constantly changing, but I really like seeing places with

Sarah McLusky:

commitments to that, that stick to it.

Sarah McLusky:

And then I think from a visibility of the work and research that we do, genuinely,

Sarah McLusky:

it feels like a comedy answer, but when the Buffy reboot comes out, I want

Sarah McLusky:

Giles to no longer be a librarian, but to be an academic researcher because I

Sarah McLusky:

believe in lots of cultural art forms like TV and movies and theatre as ways

Sarah McLusky:

of telling stories about the world.

Sarah McLusky:

Nothing makes a career look sexier and cool than having a hot person

Sarah McLusky:

on a hit TV show doing that job.

Sarah McLusky:

I believe Giles, Rupert Giles on Buffy was the first non librarian

Sarah McLusky:

ever to be on the big academic journal, The Librarian, right?

Sarah McLusky:

So having someone on TV who really shows the great side.

Sarah McLusky:

As what Giles did on Buffy was academic research.

Sarah McLusky:

They were sitting down, they were making that, and then they had a practical

Sarah McLusky:

application in fighting monsters.

Sarah McLusky:

I genuinely think if Giles on the reboot or someone doing that watcher role was

Sarah McLusky:

an academic researcher, it would be an amazing thing for telling people what

Sarah McLusky:

about the joys and the powers of research.

Sarah McLusky:

Let's go even further.

Sarah McLusky:

Let's have an assistant who is like a public engagement person.

Sarah McLusky:

Let's not let the researchers all the glory.

Sarah McLusky:

Esther Lisk-Carew: That would be amazing.

Sarah McLusky:

I'll do some consultation on Buffy.

Sarah McLusky:

That would be amazing.

Sarah McLusky:

Yeah.

Sarah McLusky:

That, I think that is the best answer I've ever had to that question.

Sarah McLusky:

Thank you Esther.

Sarah McLusky:

Esther Lisk-Carew: Thank you.

Sarah McLusky:

Oh, I, we're coming towards the end of our time we shall leave our

Sarah McLusky:

listeners with that image in their heads.

Sarah McLusky:

If people want to find out more about you and the work that

Sarah McLusky:

you do where do you hang out?

Sarah McLusky:

Where's a good place to find you?

Sarah McLusky:

Esther Lisk-Carew: So I do a lot of the public engagement

Sarah McLusky:

through our website ahead@mmu.ac.

Sarah McLusky:

uk.

Sarah McLusky:

And we have a Linktree that I link both public engagement events, but

Sarah McLusky:

also articles about the research and about our researchers and what

Sarah McLusky:

they're doing out in the world, whether it them being on an amazing

Sarah McLusky:

podcast or other kind of videos and resources and things that they produce.

Sarah McLusky:

They're available through the AHEAD website.

Sarah McLusky:

But also we have a whole range of public engagement activities for Manchester Met.

Sarah McLusky:

So if you go onto the Manchester Metropolitan University website

Sarah McLusky:

and go to the event, there's a huge range of events that we do.

Sarah McLusky:

I think people don't know about how much public facing work

Sarah McLusky:

that we do as an organisation.

Sarah McLusky:

So heading to the events page on the Manchester Metropolitan

Sarah McLusky:

University website is amazing.

Sarah McLusky:

Fantastic.

Sarah McLusky:

I'll get links to those and put them in the show notes.

Sarah McLusky:

And and do you yourself, do you hang out on LinkedIn or any, anybody, anywhere.

Sarah McLusky:

If anybody wants to talk chat, Buffy.

Sarah McLusky:

Esther Lisk-Carew: Yes.

Sarah McLusky:

Oh yes.

Sarah McLusky:

You can find me on, you can find me on LinkedIn.

Sarah McLusky:

I also have a Linktree for my kind of freelance and other activities

Sarah McLusky:

I do, sometimes I host film events.

Sarah McLusky:

Yeah, as I say, we'll get some links to those

Sarah McLusky:

and put 'em in the show notes.

Sarah McLusky:

People can find them there.

Sarah McLusky:

Thank you so much for coming along, telling us about the work that you do

Sarah McLusky:

and given me in particular a good laugh.

Sarah McLusky:

I hope other people have had that too, so thank you.

Sarah McLusky:

Esther Lisk-Carew: If we can't spread joy with our work, what are we doing?

Sarah McLusky:

Thanks for listening to Research Adjacent.

Sarah McLusky:

If you're listening in a podcast app, please check you're subscribed and then

Sarah McLusky:

use the links in the episode description to find full show notes and to follow

Sarah McLusky:

the podcast on LinkedIn or Instagram.

Sarah McLusky:

You can also find all the links and other episodes at www.researchadjacent.com.

Sarah McLusky:

Research Adjacent is presented and produced by Sarah McLusky,

Sarah McLusky:

and the theme music is by Lemon Music Studios on Pixabay.

Sarah McLusky:

And you, yes you, get a big gold star for listening right to the end.

Sarah McLusky:

See you next time.