1st Edition

Labour, Policy, and Ideology in East Asian Creative Industries

Edited By Teri Silvio, Lily H. Chumley Copyright 2020
    132 Pages
    by Routledge

    130 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book addresses some of the questions that have been brought to light by the varied experiences of culture industry workers and consumer publics across East Asia over the past decade.





    For over twenty years, the creative industries have been seen as the engine driving global economic transformation, as a way out of the dilemmas of de-industrialization, and as key to the projection of national soft power. The chapters in this book cover the former ‘Tiger Economies’ of South Korea, Taiwan, and Singapore, as well as Japan and China, and focus on a number of different industries – cinema, television, graphic design, fashion, and literature. The authors include sociologists, anthropologists, and cultural studies scholars, who approach the topics of creative work, government policy, and entrepreneurial strategy from a variety of perspectives. The chapters examine the varied political, economic, and social structures that influence the development of creative industries within the region and reveal how the careers of creative industry workers in different cities and different industries can vary. They also show how the development of the creative industries can affect many aspects of society, including city planning, policing, democratic politics, and ethnic and national identities.





    This book was originally published as a special issue of Culture, Theory and Critique.

    1. Introduction: After creativity: labour, policy, and ideology in East Asian creative industries

    Teri Silvio

    2. Korea’s blacklist scandal: governmentality, culture, and creativity

    Ju Oak Kim

    3. Cool governance: Japan’s ubiquitous society, surveillance, and creative industries

    Kukhee Choo

    4. Nation branding in contemporary Taiwan: a grassroots perspective

    Adina Simona Zemanek

    5. Representing creative labour and identity in Singaporean graphic novels: Sonny Liew and Troy Chin

    Teri Silvio

    6. The ‘diaspora advantage’ of Pauline Chan (1956–): from multicultural filmmaker to cultural broker

    Audrey Yue

    7. The paradoxes of creativity in Guangzhou, China’s wholesale market for fast fashion

    Nellie Chu

    Biography

    Teri Silvio is an Associate Research Fellow at the Institute of Ethnology at the Academia Sinica, Taiwan. She is the author of Puppets, Gods, and Brands: Theorizing the Age of Animation from Taiwan (2019).





    Lily H. Chumley is Associate Professor of Media, Culture and Communication at New York University, USA. She is the author of Creativity Class: Art School and Culture Work in Postsocialist China (2016).