ABSTRACT

The past two decades witnessed the rise of television entertainment in China. Although television networks are still state-owned and Party-controlled in China, the ideological landscape of television programs has become increasingly diverse and even paradoxical, simultaneously subservient and defiant, nationalistic and cosmopolitan, moralistic and fun-loving, extravagant and mundane. Studying Chinese television as a key node in the network of power relationships, therefore, provides us with a unique opportunity to understand the tension-fraught and , paradox-permeated conditions of Chinese post-socialism.

This book argues for a serious engagement with television entertainment. rethinking, It addresses the following questions. How is entertainment television politically and culturally significant in the Chinese context? How have political, industrial, and technological changes in the 2000s affected the way Chinese television relates to the state and society? How can we think of media regulation and censorship without perpetuating the myth of a self-serving authoritarian regime vs. a subdued cultural workforce? What do popular televisual texts tell us about the unsettled and reconfigured relations between commercial television and the state? The book presents a number of studies of popular television programs that are sensitive to the changing production and regulatory contexts for Chinese television in the twenty-first century.

As an interdisciplinary study of the television industry, this book covers a number of important issues in China today, such as censorship, nationalism, consumerism, social justice, and the central and local authorities. As such, it will appeal to a broad audience including students and scholars of Chinese culture and society, media studies, television studies, and cultural studies.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

part I|52 pages

Entertaining TV – a new territory of significance

chapter 1|16 pages

Teaching people how to live

Shenghuo programs on Chinese television

chapter 2|18 pages

The New Family Mediator

TV mediation programs in China's “harmonious society”

chapter 1|16 pages

The long commute

Mobile television and the seamless social

part II|37 pages

“Curbing entertainment”

chapter 4|18 pages

“Clean up the Screen”

Regulating television entertainment in the 2000s

chapter 5|17 pages

Rethinking censorship in China

The case of Snail House

part III|87 pages

Commercial television and the reconfiguration of history, memory, and nationalism

chapter 6|14 pages

Imagining the Other

Foreigners on the Chinese TV screen

chapter 7|20 pages

When foreigners perform the Chinese nation

Televised global Chinese language competitions

chapter 8|17 pages

Make the present serve the past

Restaging On Guard beneath the Neon Lights in contemporary China

chapter 9|17 pages

Remolding heroes

The erasure of class discourse in the Red Classics television drama adaptations

chapter 10|17 pages

Tianxia revisited

Family and empire on the television screen