Description

Book Synopsis

The paradoxical relationship between Chinese creative workers and the state

Chinese Creator Economies dives into the paradoxical lives lived by creative professionals in emerging economies across China. Jian Lin contextualizes the socioeconomic conditions in which cultural production takes place and pushes back against the dominant understanding of Chinese media as a centralized, state-controlled apparatus by looking at how individual creative workers grapple with governance and precarity in the Chinese cultural industries and develop their bilateral subjectivities within the politico-economic system of Chinese media.
Drawing on intensive empirical research conducted on creative labor practices across television, journalism, design, and social media, Chinese Creative Economies looks at both Chinese and foreign-born content creators, exploring the tensions between Beijing's limits on individual creativity, and its aspirations to become a global hub for cultura

Trade Review

The most rigorous and accomplished analysis of the working conditions of Chinese cultural
workers to date. This will be a key reference point in the burgeoning literature on cultural labour
not only in China but internationally.

* David Hesmondhalgh, University of Leeds *

Essential reading. Jian Lin offers a critical and empirically evidenced approach to rethink
creative work studies beyond the confines of Western experiences and theorizations. Lin harvests
his insights adroitly, boldly, and compassionately. His penchant for the schizophrenic, the
multifaceted, the dilemma, the bilateral, is a rejection of any homogenizing account of the state
and the market, of cultural work and creative class. In its place, I read more futures.

* Chow Yiu Fai, Hong Kong Baptist University *

You will not read a better account that dewesternizes creative-labor studies than this book. Jian
Lin goes deeper than usual into creators’ lived experience and also wider—across state
enterprises and international workers as well indies and the digital class. Jian’s heart is open and
his mind is ablaze.

* Stuart Cunningham, Queensland University of Technology *

The most updated and insightful assessment of the working condition of Chinese creative
workers. Bilateral creatives work under the planned logic of state’s creative industries, and at the
same time, work creatively and subtly against the system of governance and cultural policy. The
most interesting and intellectually intriguing aspects of the book owes much to Lin’s five years
of fieldwork.

* Anthony Fung, The Chinese University of Hong Kong *

Chinese Creator Economies

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    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Sat 4 Jul 2026.

    A Hardback by Jian Lin

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      View other formats and editions of Chinese Creator Economies by Jian Lin

      Publisher: New York University Press
      Publication Date: 23/05/2023
      ISBN13: 9781479811878, 978-1479811878
      ISBN10: 1479811874

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      The paradoxical relationship between Chinese creative workers and the state

      Chinese Creator Economies dives into the paradoxical lives lived by creative professionals in emerging economies across China. Jian Lin contextualizes the socioeconomic conditions in which cultural production takes place and pushes back against the dominant understanding of Chinese media as a centralized, state-controlled apparatus by looking at how individual creative workers grapple with governance and precarity in the Chinese cultural industries and develop their bilateral subjectivities within the politico-economic system of Chinese media.
      Drawing on intensive empirical research conducted on creative labor practices across television, journalism, design, and social media, Chinese Creative Economies looks at both Chinese and foreign-born content creators, exploring the tensions between Beijing's limits on individual creativity, and its aspirations to become a global hub for cultura

      Trade Review

      The most rigorous and accomplished analysis of the working conditions of Chinese cultural
      workers to date. This will be a key reference point in the burgeoning literature on cultural labour
      not only in China but internationally.

      * David Hesmondhalgh, University of Leeds *

      Essential reading. Jian Lin offers a critical and empirically evidenced approach to rethink
      creative work studies beyond the confines of Western experiences and theorizations. Lin harvests
      his insights adroitly, boldly, and compassionately. His penchant for the schizophrenic, the
      multifaceted, the dilemma, the bilateral, is a rejection of any homogenizing account of the state
      and the market, of cultural work and creative class. In its place, I read more futures.

      * Chow Yiu Fai, Hong Kong Baptist University *

      You will not read a better account that dewesternizes creative-labor studies than this book. Jian
      Lin goes deeper than usual into creators’ lived experience and also wider—across state
      enterprises and international workers as well indies and the digital class. Jian’s heart is open and
      his mind is ablaze.

      * Stuart Cunningham, Queensland University of Technology *

      The most updated and insightful assessment of the working condition of Chinese creative
      workers. Bilateral creatives work under the planned logic of state’s creative industries, and at the
      same time, work creatively and subtly against the system of governance and cultural policy. The
      most interesting and intellectually intriguing aspects of the book owes much to Lin’s five years
      of fieldwork.

      * Anthony Fung, The Chinese University of Hong Kong *

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