Sign in or register
for additional privileges

East Asian Youth Cultures Spring 2015

Globalized Identities, Localized Practices, and Social Transitions

Dwayne Dixon, Author

You appear to be using an older verion of Internet Explorer. For the best experience please upgrade your IE version or switch to a another web browser.

Hip-Hop's Role in Chinese Youth Culture

Hip-hop continued to extend its global reach by also exerting its influence throughout China. Similar to how hip-hop in Japan developed, the adoption of hip-hop in China was also driven by socioeconomic and cultural factors that drove the emergence of hip hop in the African-American community. Coming from a history of political and educational systems that restricted free expression, Chinese society has since begun shifting into a market-based economy where choice and difference is encouraged. Among many other effects, this change has led to a society where wealth and status are achievable but where an inequality gap also exists between the rich and the poor, putting people, especially youth, under large social and economic pressure (Liu, 2010). However, these changes also opened up China to global media during a time when Internet technology was rapidly expanding and with it, the migration of hip-hop. Movies like Breakdance entered the Chinese film scene and popularized breakdancing as a high-energy, unrestrained dance that signified freedom, and movies like Rock ‘n Roll Kids encouraged youth to assert themselves through hip-hop dance and other ways, even in the face of elderly conservatism (Clark, 2012). In similar fashion to how hip-hop was used in the African-American and Japanese communities, hip-hop began to rise as a tool for asserting self-expression and identity for young people in China, especially those who were in lower social standing.

Sources:

Clark, P. (2012). Youth culture in china: From red guards to netizens. Cambridge University Press.

Liu, X. (2010). Across the border: hip hop's influence on chinese youth culture. Southeast Review of Asian Studies, 32, 145-153.

Comment on this page
 

Discussion of "Hip-Hop's Role in Chinese Youth Culture"

Add your voice to this discussion.

Checking your signed in status ...

Previous page on path Glocalization of Hip-Hop within East Asia, page 5 of 7 Next page on path

Related:  The Normalization of Cosmetic Surgery in South Korea: Investment in Self-Development & Women as Consumer BodiesElena KimDelinquent Girls and Capitalist ConsumptionJapan's Recession: Blaming the VictimCommodification of the Intellectual on Neoliberal Youth DevelopmentCase Study: The Use of Dialect in the Rise of the Cantonese Hip-Hop ScenePostmodern Korea: Self-Actualization and the Transfer of ResponsibilityMasqueraders and Empty Vessels: Barriers to Hybridity in Popular Korean MusicThe Normalization/Homogenization of an 'Ideal' Beauty Standard: Capitalist Strategy & GlobalizationThe Glocalization and Hybridity of AnimeContextualizing Hip-Hop in Japan and Its Role in Youth CultureGlocalization of Hip-Hop within East AsiaA Brief History on Hip-HopConclusion of Global Mass CultureGlobalization & Neo-liberal Commodification of Youth IdentityCultural Dictation: Center-Periphery Media and LocalizationEducation and its Effects on the Development of East Asian Youth CultureThe Freeter: 汚い、危険、きつい.The Gendered Impact of Neoliberalism and the Patriarchy in JapanDialetics of Global Culture and AuthenticityHybridity, Localization, and the Global Youth Imaginary of MediaMechanized Bodies: Modernization and the Hybridity of the Techno-Orient in Japanese AnimeJapanese Fashion: Reclaiming the cultural production of femininityIntensification of Culture in the "Modern" WorldPrecarious WorkCultural Harmonies: Successes and Failures of Musical Hybridity through International CollaborationThe Cosmetic Surgery Phenomenon in South Korea: Women, Youth and Capitalist ConsumptionSuicide in East AsiaOffline Third Spaces: Anime Conventions as Sites of DesireGlobalization, Flow of Culture and Sub-culturesEducation in Taiwan: Set for FailureIntersection of Neoliberalism and Precarious LaborHistory of the Chinese Hukou System and Migrant WorkersBurden of the IndividualPrecarious RelationshipsSex Work in Japan: Precarity, Risk, Empowerment?Japanese Hostess and Host ClubsJoshi Kosei BusinessesHybridity in the Fourth Space: Video Games and the Global Youth ImaginaryHuman Trafficking and J-Pop Idols