ABSTRACT

This book presents an analysis of television histories across India, China, Taiwan, Singapore, Indonesia, Japan, Hong Kong, the Philippines, Malaysia and Bhutan. It offers a set of standard data on the history of television’s cultural, industrial and political structures in each specific national context, allowing for cross-regional comparative analysis. Each chapter presents a case study on a salient aspect of contemporary television culture of the nation in question, such as analyses of ideology in television content in Japan and Singapore, and transformations of industry structure vis-à-vis state versus market control in China and Taiwan. The book provides a comprehensive overview of TV histories in Asia as well as a survey of current issues and concerns in Asian television cultures and their social and political impact.

chapter 1|18 pages

Introduction

Television histories in Asia: nation-building, modernization and marketization

chapter 2|19 pages

Television, scale and place-identity in the PRC

Provincial, national and global influences from 1958 to 2013

chapter 4|16 pages

Watching television in Bhutan

chapter 5|18 pages

Battling angels and golden orange blossoms

Thai television and/as the popular public sphere

chapter 6|20 pages

Dramatizing the nation

Television, history and the construction of Singaporean identity

chapter 7|15 pages

Working women and romance on Japanese television dramas

Changes since Tokyo Love Story

chapter 8|17 pages

Unpacking multiculturalism and Islam in Malaysia

State–corporate television celebrations of Bangsa Malaysia

chapter 9|20 pages

The television of intervention

Mediating patron–client ties in the Philippines

chapter 10|18 pages

Taiyu serial dramas in Taiwan

A history of problem-making

chapter 11|16 pages

Shifts in Korean television music programmes

Democratization, transnationalization, digitalization