Article
Details
Citation
Salamon E (2025) Peripheral Creator Labor: Navigating Regional Marginalization and Resistance in Social Media Entertainment. New Media and Society. https://doi.org/10.1177/14614448241308520
Abstract
This article examines how social media creators in the United Kingdom navigate regional labor dynamics in small urban cities and towns and their perceptions of potential resistance strategies. Grounded in a creator workers’ inquiry and thematic analysis of in-depth interviews with creators (N = 53), it expands the notion of peripheral creator labor. It reveals how digital factors and historically-entrenched regional disparities exacerbate the global platform precarity experienced by different types of peripheral creators and the relative privilege of peripheral Englishlanguage Western-based creators. The study introduces the concepts of regional monetization precarity and localized production space and networking precarity to capture the unique challenges creators face in small urban cities and their shared strategic resistance strategies to effect change, combining professional support and unionization. This study contributes to theoretical understandings of creator labor by challenging a binary notion of “center-periphery” relations and a homogenous Western user experience in creator economies.
Keywords
creators; influencers; labor; platforms; political economy; social media; work
Journal
New Media and Society
Status | Early Online |
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Funders | |
Publication date online | 02/01/2025 |
Date accepted by journal | 05/12/2024 |
URL | |
ISSN | 1461-4448 |
eISSN | 1461-7315 |
People (1)
Senior Lecturer in Media Production, Communications, Media and Culture