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Comes the Southern Revolution: The Reframing of Chinese Shan-zhai Toward Identity Change

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 May 2024

Shih-Chang Hung
Affiliation:
Institute of Technology Management, National Tsing Hua University, Hsinchu 30013, Taiwan
Yu-Chun Chen*
Affiliation:
Department of Business Administration, National Formosa University, Yunlin 63201, Taiwan
*
Corresponding author: Yu-Chun Chen (ycchen@nfu.edu.tw)

Abstract

Following the literature on entrepreneurial framing and identity change, we examined how Chinese shan-zhai phone entrepreneurs have drawn on their cultural resources to reframe their businesses to claim new identities and gain legitimacy over time. Through qualitative procedures, we found that a staged process of collective identity development underlies this entrepreneurial process, consisting of building (a) niche-market identity via pragmatic reframing, (b) socio-political identity via nationalistic reframing, and finally (c) professional identity via comprehensive reframing. There has also been a clear change in the sources of legitimacy from the indigenous market through the wider Chinese society to the more globally defined industry. Our central contribution is a processual model of identity change through cultural reframing specifically focused on how informal entrepreneurs grow into formalization and global competition.

摘要

摘要

本研究依循創業賦名和身份轉變的文獻,探索中國山寨手機創業家們如何運用文化資源,持續重新對其事業賦名,並隨著時間的推演,逐步建立具正當性的新身份。透過質性研究方法,我們發現在這個創業的歷程中,存在著發展集體身份的三階段轉變,包含 (a) 藉由實用主義重新賦名,以建立利基市場身份;(b) 透過民族主義的重新賦名,以建立社會政治身份;以及 (c) 藉由全面的重新賦名,以建立專業身份。此外,賦予其正當性的來源也在不同的階段中有明顯的變化,從最初來自深圳本土的市場,逐步擴大至更廣泛的中國社會,最終涵蓋全球產業的範疇。本研究的主要貢獻乃是提出了一個透過文化重新賦名,以實現身份轉變的歷程模型,此模型特別強調非正式經濟體的創業家是如何經由文化歷程,逐步走向正規化並參與全球競爭。

Type
Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of International Association for Chinese Management Research

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