ABSTRACT

This innovative collection investigates the ways in which television programs around the world have highlighted modernization and encouraged nation-building. It is an attempt to catalogue and better understand the contours of this phenomenon, which took place as television developed and expanded in different parts of the world between the 1950s and the 1990s. From popular science and adult education shows to news magazines and television plays, few themes so thoroughly penetrated the small screen for so many years as modernization, with television producers and state authorities using television programs to bolster modernization efforts. Contributors analyze the hallmarks of these media efforts: nation-building, consumerism and consumer culture, the education and integration of citizens, and the glorification of the nation’s technological achievements.

chapter |19 pages

Pro Wrestling and Crying Cowboys

American Influence on Early Japanese Television

chapter |15 pages

The Tightrope between East and West

East German Television Fiction from the 1960s and the Representation of a Socialist Modernity

chapter |21 pages

Television Changing Habits

TV Programming in 1960s Soviet Latvia

chapter |20 pages

A Lachrymose Heroine for the Masses

The Origins of the Cinderella Plotline in Mexican Telenovelas, 1968–1973

chapter |18 pages

Flowers, Steppe Fires, and Communists

Images of Modernity and Identity on TV Shows from Soviet Buryatia in the Brezhnev Era

chapter |22 pages

“Blue and White” Science and Technology

Nationality and Popular Science on Israeli Television, 1968–1988

chapter |21 pages

From “The Devil in the Black Box” to a Nation-Building Tool

Early TV in South Africa—A New Medium for a New Nation