In summary
Despite media coverage, research on the experiences of racialized minorities in the cultural sector remains marginal in the academic literatures. In the UK, existing work focuses primarily on African Caribbean and South Asian groups or is based on aggregated data that erases the specificity of experiences of different groups gathered under the category ‘BAME’ (Black Asian Minority Ethnic).
This research explores the experiences of British East Asian actors in the film and television sector in the context of growing public debates over racial discrimination, exclusion and inequalities in the wider creative and cultural industries.
In the context of a pluralistic cartographic of racisms, where cultural value is assigned or denied to different ‘racial’ groups in specific ways, a finer-tuned analysis is required to unearth the particular challenges faced by different groups and within particular subsectors of the creative and cultural industries.
What did we explore and how?
This research explores the experiences of British East Asian actors in the film and television sector in the context of growing public debates over racial discrimination, exclusion and inequalities in the wider creative and cultural industries.
The objectives of this study were:
- To identify the challenges and barriers faced by East Asian actors in order to ascertain whether, and if so, how specific perceptions of East Asians contribute to inequalities in employment in the film and television industry.
This will make a significant intervention into public and academic debates, which currently treat BAME individuals as a homogeneous group, and shed light on the experiences of one of the fastest growing but invisible minorities.
- To assess the needs of users and stakeholders by examining the views of actors and industry professionals on the prevalence and nature of inequalities faced by East Asian actors in the film and television industry and how they can be addressed through research and industry practice.
Benefits and influence of this research
Through collaboration with the award-winning independent film-maker Rosa Fong, verbatim dialogue from research interviews has been restaged in the form of classic British film or TV dramas in a series of short films. These highlight the invisibility of British East Asians on British mainstream screens and show why their exclusion occurs despite the proliferation of diversity discourses in recent years.