Publication | Closed Access
American and Chinese Similarities and Differences in Defining and Valuing Creative Products
100
Citations
94
References
2012
Year
Value TheoryChinese SimilaritiesEducationChinese Explicit BeliefsPopular CultureCultural StudiesConsumer CultureCreativityCreative ThinkingCultural DiversityImplicit BeliefsCreative TechnologyWorld CulturesCreative WritingCreativity AssessmentCultural ImpactMarketingValuing Creative ProductsCultureChinese View CreativityBusinessCreative IndustryArts
Abstract This review of the literature explores how Americans and Chinese view creativity and what they expect from creative products. American and Chinese explicit beliefs about creativity (i.e., expert opinions) share many similarities. Implicit beliefs, however, show more divergence: Americans tend to value novelty and more “groundbreaking” types of creativity, whereas Chinese tend to appreciate creativity within constraints, such as reworking a traditional concept. The context of how people respond to creativity obviously varies by culture, although there are also some communal and universal creative ideals.
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