社会杂志 ›› 2026, Vol. 46 ›› Issue (1): 171-205.

• 论文 • 上一篇    下一篇

成为“情境艺术家”:斜杠影像创作者的身份建构

张佳雪, 袁同凯()   

  • 出版日期:2026-01-20 发布日期:2026-03-17
  • 作者简介:张佳雪  南开大学社会学院
    袁同凯  南开大学社会学院,E-mail: yuantongkai@nankai.edu.cn
  • 基金资助:
    南开大学特殊支持项目;天津市哲学社会科学规划项目;国家社科基金一般项目(24BMZ096);南开大学本科教育教学改革项目(NKJG2024012)

Becoming Situated Artists: Identity Construction of Slash Photographers

Jiaxue ZHANG, Tongkai YUAN()   

  • Online:2026-01-20 Published:2026-03-17
  • About author:ZHANG Jiaxue, School of Sociology, Nankai University
    YUAN Tongkai, School of Sociology, Nankai University, E-mail: yuantongkai@nankai.edu.cn
  • Supported by:
    Special Support Project of Nankai University;Tianjin Philosophy and Social Science Planning Project;General Project of National Social Science Foundation(24BMZ096);Project of Teaching Reform of Undergraduate Education, Nankai University(NKJG2024012)

摘要:

通过对洋芋乡村摄影项目的案例研究,本文力图呈现斜杠职业背景下中产阶层的影像创作者所经历的情境性身份实践。在高度制度化的职业体系中,他们一方面在主业责任与创作欲望之间有一种撕裂与困顿感,另一方面又借由“艺术家”的身份想象为自我意义提供支点,在制度依赖与自主需求之间反复拉扯。进入影像社群参与在地创作成为他们追寻艺术身份的重要方式。然而,影像社群中的在地创作以“短期驻地”为前提,艺术身份的建构往往成为一种阶段性的自我叙事,并受到主业时间结构与资本逻辑悖论式的牵引。本文反思了既有研究中将多重职业身份主要理解为谋生策略或流动工具的解释路径,丰富了对斜杠职业背景下当代中产阶层生活处境与身份经验的理解。

关键词: 斜杠, 情境性身份, 影像创作者, 身份建构

Abstract:

Through a case study of the Yangyu rural photography project, this paper seeks to present the situated identity practices experienced by middle-class photographers in the context of slash careers. It attempts to explain why urban residents with stable primary occupations repeatedly participate in rural photography projects and immerse themselves in "living like artists" during short-term residencies, even when livelihood pressures or mobility demands are not the primary motivations. Within a highly institutionalized career system, the primary occupation of photographer slash-line visual creators provides security and dignity. Yet it also dictates their daily life through demanding work schedules and relentless performance expectations. Often photography—a relatively stable hobby—is squeezed into the fleeting hours after work, leaving them torn and burdened between their professional responsibilities and creative aspirations. Faced with this situation, they often embrace the "artist" identity as a source of support. By leveraging the elevated status mainstream narratives assign to artists and their close association with creativity, they find a fulcrum for self-meaning, repeatedly adjusting their commitment between institutional dependence and autonomous needs. Thus, entering visual communities for local creation becomes a crucial way for them to pursue artistic identity. In terms of interaction dynamics, the visual community is guided and organized by "artist-journalists", presenting itself as a collaborative circle that blends public engagement with individual expression while maintaining a non-hierarchical style. This structure allows creators to transform their private creative persistence into a shared, discussable practice through relatively stable interactions. Regarding content, this community emphasizes field-style documentary filming of daily life. Through collective organization and interpretation of these images, it constructs narrative spaces that connect fragmented shooting experiences into coherent expressive threads, achieving an aesthetic reconstruction of everyday existence. Entering the exhibition phase, the intervention of the county-level public cultural system and curatorial team provides artists with a path to public recognition through both offline displays and online dissemination. Repeated public narration and reevaluation of the works' value also enable the photographers to achieve self-affirmation of their artistic identity. However, local creation within the visual community operates on the premise of "short-term residencies", where the construction of artistic identity often manifests as a phased self-narrative. On one hand, rural photography projects formally distance themselves from urban daily life; on the other, participants deliberately maintain a state of "both intimate and distant" relationships. This dynamic makes "living like an artist" easier to stimulate and affirm within the project itself, yet difficult to seamlessly carry back into the photographer's post-departure daily lives. Moreover, this phased self-narrative is paradoxically shaped by the temporal constraints of primary occupations and the logic of capital. The redistribution of time and energy presents an inescapable practical challenge for nearly all participants. Consequently, some creators do not entirely separate their professional identities from their creative sphere; instead, they leverage existing social relationships as a "more efficient" resource for their work. Economic considerations also become embedded in the selection and curation of creative content through more subtle, everyday ways. Based on these observations, this paper challenges existing interpretations that frame multiple professional identities primarily as livelihood strategies or tools for mobility. Instead, it argues that the identity construction of photographers with a slash identity should be understood as a situated identity practice unfolding within institutionalized career systems. This identity construction temporarily repairs the oppressive life experiences imposed by the time structure of primary occupations and rebuilds self-meaning through phased engagement in visual communities and local creative activities. Yet, within the cycle of returning to primary occupations and sustained participation, it exposes an irreconcilable tension between dependence and autonomy. The study enriches our understanding of the life circumstances and identity experiences of contemporary middle-class groups within the context of slash careers.

Key words: slash career, situated identity, photographer, identity construction