VIRTUAL CELEBRITY INDUSTRIES IN EAST ASIA

Autores/as

  • Rachel Berryman Curtin University
  • Crystal Abidin
  • Do Own Donna Kim
  • Seol Hwang
  • Esperanza Miyake

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5210/spir.v2024i0.14096

Palabras clave:

virtual celebrity, virtual idol, virtual influencer, East Asia, virtual anchor

Resumen

The concept of virtual celebrity realises the ambition of manufactured pop idols that inspired Japan’s idol industry in the 1970s, and spread across East Asia soon thereafter. Today, the term encompasses a variety of genres with local histories and applications, including Vocaloids, virtual idols, vTubers, virtual anchors, and virtual influencers. Although virtual celebrity was once considered a niche interest reserved for $2 and dedicated fans of ACG (Anime, Comics and Games), recent shifts in government priorities, technological innovations, and heightened capital investment have brought virtual celebrity into mainstream view. This panel considers the various organisations, technologies, platforms, labour, and stakeholders involved in East Asia’s flourishing virtual celebrity industries. Its five papers explore the commercial, cultural, and symbolic value of virtual celebrities across and beyond East Asia, examining historical antecedents; cross-industry collaborations; processes of cultural commodification; industrial practices; and emergent media discourses. Introducing cases from Japan, Korea, and China, the panel's regional focus draws attention to the “transnational” (Iwabuchi, 2014) flows of virtual celebrity across borders, languages, industries, platforms, and technologies.

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Publicado

2025-01-02

Cómo citar

Berryman, . R., Abidin, C., Kim, D. O. D., Hwang, S., & Miyake, E. (2025). VIRTUAL CELEBRITY INDUSTRIES IN EAST ASIA. AoIR Selected Papers of Internet Research. https://doi.org/10.5210/spir.v2024i0.14096

Número

Sección

Panels