
How do media professionals handle the risks of film and television production given market uncertainties, fears of industrial decline, and increasing job insecurity? What does the work of creating spectacle on-screen amid volatile conditions off-screen mean to them? In Haunted: An Ethnography of the Hollywood and Hong Kong Media Industries, Sylvia J. Martin explores these questions about members of the highly commercial film and television industries of Hollywood and Hong Kong (the latter often referred to as the "Hollywood of the East"). Drawing on extensive multi-sited ethnographic research--including participant-observation as an extra in Hollywood and interviews with stunt workers in Hong Kong--Martin takes the readers onto studio lots and urban filming locations in Hollywood and Hong Kong to discover the haunting perils and pleasures of the filming process for media workers as they also grapple with broader social, economic, and political issues. Signaling a new turn in anthropology of media, this ethnography is not only a comparative study of the Hollywood and Hong Kong media industries but also an examination of the thematic and transnational connections between them. Through unexpected findings about engagement with religion and the supernatural in both industrial sites, Martin offers a unique perspective on risk and uncertainty for media labor and production studies.Haunted is a volume in the ISSUES OF GLOBALIZATION: CASE STUDIES IN CONTEMPORARY ANTHROPOLOGY series, which examines the experiences of individual communities in our contemporary world. Each volume offers a brief and engaging exploration of a particular issue arising from globalization and its cultural, political, and economic effects on certain peoples or groups.
How do media professionals in Hollywood and Hong Kong navigate the pervasive risks, job insecurity, and market volatility inherent in the film and television industries? Sylvia J. Martin, an anthropologist specializing in media labor, utilizes multi-sited ethnographic research to examine the lived experiences of workers within these two major production hubs. By contrasting the industrial environments of Hollywood and Hong Kong, the author argues that media production is fundamentally shaped by a sense of haunting, where workers contend with both economic instability and a surprising reliance on supernatural or religious frameworks to manage uncertainty.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars in the field of media anthropology recognize this work as a significant contribution to the study of transnational labor and industrial precarity. Readers frequently note the accessible yet rigorous nature of the ethnographic prose, which effectively bridges the gap between academic theory and on-the-ground industrial observation.
Page Count:
256
Publication Date:
2016-09-20
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190464461
ISBN-13:
9780190464462
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