ABSTRACT

Across Asia, consumer culture is increasingly shaping everyday life, with neoliberal economic and social policies increasingly adopted by governments who see their citizens as individualised, sovereign consumers with choices about their lifestyles and identities. One aspect of this development has been the emergence of new wealthy middle classes with lifestyle aspirations shaped by national, regional and global media – especially by a range of new popular lifestyle media, which includes magazines, television and mobile and social media. This book explores how far everyday conceptions and experiences of identity are being transformed by media cultures across the region. It considers a range of different media in different Asian contexts, contrasting how the shaping of lifestyles in Asia differs from similar processes in Western countries, and assessing how the new lifestyle media represents not just a new emergent media culture, but also illustrates wider cultural and social changes in the Asian region.

chapter |12 pages

Foreword

Rethinking consumption in economic recessionary East Asia

chapter 1|19 pages

Lifestyle media in Asia

Consumption, aspiration and identity

chapter 2|18 pages

Neoliberal capitalism and media representation in Korean television series

Subversion and sustainability

chapter 3|17 pages

Family, aesthetic authority and class identity in the shadow of neoliberal modernity

The cultural politics of China's Exchanging Spaces

chapter 4|15 pages

Mediatization of yangsheng

The political and cultural economy of health education through media in China

chapter 5|14 pages

The Pink Ribbon Campaign in Chinese fashion magazines

Celebrity, luxury lifestyles and consumerism

chapter 7|17 pages

Media and cultural cosmopolitanism

Asian women in transnational flows

chapter 8|16 pages

Differential (im)mobilities

Imaginative transnationalism in Taiwanese women's travel TV

chapter 9|15 pages

Locating the mobile

Intergenerational locative media in Tokyo, Shanghai and Melbourne

chapter 10|14 pages

Dishing up diversity?

Class, aspirationalism and Indian food television

chapter 11|15 pages

Islam's got talent

Television, performance and the Islamic public sphere in Malaysia