2020
DOI: 10.1177/2059436420964973
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

No longer aspirational: A case study of young creative workers in Hong Kong who quit

Abstract: While many young creative workers are braving precaritization presumably with the drive of aspiration, this article focuses on the other end of their career path: disillusionment. Informed by the experiences of five self-proclaimed wenyi qingnian – loosely translated as cultural youth – in Hong Kong, this article tracks their aspirations which kept them hoping and going till they were disillusioned and decided to quit. Drawing together two lines of research – on precarity and on failure – our study fills in a … Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1

Citation Types

0
3
0

Year Published

2022
2022
2024
2024

Publication Types

Select...
4

Relationship

0
4

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 4 publications
(3 citation statements)
references
References 29 publications
0
3
0
Order By: Relevance
“…Although there is a growing body of research based on non-Western case studies which show that creative workers engage routinely in a complex array of labour 6 6 practices that do not necessarily abide by the monetary, profit-seeking logic of neoliberalism (Alacovska & Gill 2019: 8;Wong & Chow 2020;Chow 2019), the majority of these studies focus on national creative industries (Kim 2014;Lin 2018;Wang & Keane 2020). Media globalization, however, raises questions about how the increasing transnationalization of production impacts on creative labour.…”
Section: Transnational Media Work From the Margins Of 'Cultural China'mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although there is a growing body of research based on non-Western case studies which show that creative workers engage routinely in a complex array of labour 6 6 practices that do not necessarily abide by the monetary, profit-seeking logic of neoliberalism (Alacovska & Gill 2019: 8;Wong & Chow 2020;Chow 2019), the majority of these studies focus on national creative industries (Kim 2014;Lin 2018;Wang & Keane 2020). Media globalization, however, raises questions about how the increasing transnationalization of production impacts on creative labour.…”
Section: Transnational Media Work From the Margins Of 'Cultural China'mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Previous studies which discussed the survivability of freelance creative workers amidst the insecurity faced in the industry were explained by referring to three factors. First, the workers' survival strategy used their social networks (Blair 2001;Hermes et al 2017;Mrozowicki and Trappman 2021;Norback and Sthyre 2019;Wong and Chow 2020). Second, the utilization of various knowledge and competencies workers possess (Dowd and Pinheiro 2013;Lingo and Tepper 2013;Throsby and Zednik 2011;Stokes 2021).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This inadequacy manifests in multiple facets across varying research areas. For instance, de Kloet et al (2020, p. 6) argued that the existing scholarship in Creative Labour Studies is haunted by a Eurocentric bias, running the risk of overlooking different context-specific socio-political dynamics (also see Tse & Shum, 2023; Wong & Chow, 2020). While the European creative industries policy has followed the discourse of either the “economization of culture” or the “culturalization of the economy” which “tends to use market reasoning to dissociate culture and media from socio-political concerns” (de Kloet et al, 2020, p. 349), in the case of China, “culture and creativity are not only touted for ‘restructuring economy,' but also designated as instrument for wielding ‘soft power' and maintaining social stability” (de Kloet et al, 2020, p. 349).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%