Patterns of Market Polarization and Market Matching in the Korean Film Industry. Patterns of Market Polarization and Market Matching in the Korean Film Industry.

Patterns of Market Polarization and Market Matching in the Korean Film Industry‪.‬

Journal of East Asian Studies 2004, May-August, 4, 2

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Publisher Description

Despite its embedded ambiguity, conventional wisdom tends to prevail over time. This may be because old adages recurrently embrace some ingredients of truth. As James A. Mathisen highlights, conventional wisdom plays a significant role in constituting knowledge as a starting point. (1) For many people, numerous adages (the rich get richer while the poor get poorer; birds of a feather flock together) are most commonly perceived as true. More interestingly, the accuracy of the two folk wisdoms appears to be more salient in culture-producing industries, including the motion picture industry. Concomitantly, the two adages have long been connected to diverse societal phenomena and sociological knowledge. Although the movie market is a sociological topic, prior research concerning the motion picture industry has been relatively sparse in sociology. Among meager previous studies, Robert R. Faulkner and Andy B. Anderson's work is conspicuous. (2) They sought to scrutinize the U.S. motion picture industry, Hollywood, in depth in terms of the interaction between markets and career mobility. They argued that the movie business, which operates through a single project (per movie), tightly interconnects with career trajectory for those who participate in the project. In particular, Hollywood tends to generate the embedded patterns of market polarization (the rich get richer while the poor get poorer) and market matching (birds of a feather flock together). That is, the key operating mechanism of Hollywood is saliently recurrent market polarization and market pairings.

GENRE
Non-Fiction
RELEASED
2004
1 May
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
23
Pages
PUBLISHER
Lynne Rienner Publishers
SIZE
217
KB

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