AEPH
Home > Economic Society and Humanities > Vol. 3 No. 2 (ESH 2026) >
The Model and Implications of the Development of Creative Industries in China, Japan and South Korea from the Perspective of Cultural Consultation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.62381/E264217
Author(s)
Yuantai Deng
Affiliation(s)
Hongyi High School, Changsha, Hunan, China *Corresponding Author
Abstract
This article, from the perspective of cultural negotiation, conducts a study on the development models of creative industries in China, Japan and South Korea. By analyzing the cultural negotiation connotations, policy promotion and industrial layout of the creative industries in these three countries, it explores the similarities and differences in their development models, and summarizes the lessons for the development of creative industries in these three countries and other nations, aiming to provide theoretical references for the sustainable development of the creative industry.
Keywords
Cultural Consultation; China-Japan-Korea; Creative Industries; Development Model.
References
[1] Moeran, B. (2021). Creative and cultural industries in East Asia: An introduction. Routledge. [2] Zhao, S. (2005). Promoting and Protecting Cultural and Creative Industries through Free Trade Agreements: The Experience from Korea and Japan. Int. J. Cultural Pol’y, 15, 4. [3] Schatz, T. (2009). Film industry studies and Hollywood history. Media industries: History, theory, and method, 45-56. [4] Garnham, N. (2005). From cultural to creative industries: An analysis of the implications of the “creative industries” approach to arts and media policy making in the United Kingdom. International journal of cultural policy, 11(1), 15-29. [5] Yoon, K., & Min, W. (2021). Transnational Hallyu: The globalization of Korean digital and popular culture. Bloomsbury Publishing PLC. [6] Liang, S., & Wang, Q. (2020). Cultural and creative industries and urban (re) development in China. Journal of Planning Literature, 35(1), 54-70. [7] Zheng, Y., Bae, K. H., & Li, N. (2022). A Comparative Study on the International Competitiveness of Korea-China Cultural Products Trade. The Journal of the Korea Contents Association, 22(9), 349-359. [8] Iwabuchi, K. (2020). Cool Japan, creative industries, and diversity. In Re-imagining creative cities in twenty-first century Asia (pp. 187-199). Cham: Springer International Publishing.
Copyright @ 2020-2035 Academic Education Publishing House All Rights Reserved