NEW TOYS, NEW APPS, NEW IDOLS: K-POP'S AI IMAGINARY

Autores

  • Sarah Keith Department of Media, Communications, Creative Arts, Language and Literature (Macquarie University)

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25112/bcij.v4i2.3835

Resumo

This article explores how AI is imagined in processes of cultural production, using K-pop as a case study. K-pop serves as a ‘canary in the coalmine’ for the global music industries, having adapted to technological change earlier than its regional counterparts. In this article, I examine the perspectives of K-pop management companies, fans, and the IT sector in depicting AI as a future-making technology. It explores how K-pop stakeholders envision AI's transformative effect on the creative and cultural industries, highlighting differences in their AI imaginaries and visions of AI's utility. Stakeholders reveal different and contrasting perspectives, shedding light on the future of the industry and the broader creative culture sector. These imaginaries of AI reveal how AI exists within networks of power and capital, and indicate different visions of AI as a future-making technology in the music industry. The discussion calls for further critical analysis of AI as a socially constructed concept, and its implications for the future of music.

Biografia do Autor

Sarah Keith, Department of Media, Communications, Creative Arts, Language and Literature (Macquarie University)

My research interests include K-pop, Korean popular culture, and East Asian popular musics; language and popular culture; music technology; the Australian music industries, and music and cultural policy; and music and screen media (including documentary, film, and games).

My research projects have explored K-pop fandom and multi-cultural understanding in Australia, following a 2016 grant from the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade's Australia-Korea Foundation. I am regional president (Australia) of the international World Association of Hallyu Studies, a multidisciplinary organisation dedicated to furthering the study of Korean popular culture. My 2016 book "The New Music Industries: Disruption and Discovery" (Palgrave: co-authored with Diane Hughes, Mark Evans, and Guy Morrow) examined the challenges of music careers in the digital age. I have supervised PhDs and Masters (research) in the areas of 20th century music and diaspora, technologised music performance, and electronic music production.

I have taught in areas including music business, music production, radio production, digital media, and music technology and performance. I currently convene units in music production and digital media. Since 2018 I have taught the summer unit 'Global Korean Popular Culture' at Kyung Hee University in Seoul, South Korea.

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Publicado

2024-12-13

Como Citar

Keith, S. (2024). NEW TOYS, NEW APPS, NEW IDOLS: K-POP’S AI IMAGINARY. Brazilian Creative Industries Journal, 4(2), 13–40. https://doi.org/10.25112/bcij.v4i2.3835