Yoga gurus on lifestyle cable channels targeting timepressured Indian urbanites; Chinese dating shows promoting competitive individualism; Taiwanese domestic makeover formats combining feng shui with life planning advice: Asian TV screens are increasingly home to a wild proliferation of popular factual programs providing lifestyle guidance to viewers. In Telemodernities Tania Lewis, Fran Martin, and Wanning Sun demonstrate how lifestyleoriented popular factual television illuminates key aspects of late modernities in South and East Asia, offering insights not only into early twentyfirstcentury media cultures but also into wider developments in the nature of public and private life, identity, citizenship, and social engagement. Drawing on ex...
The Asian TV industry is 'unstoppable' reported Variety in 2008, yet still most people living in the...
The attached document may provide the author's accepted version of a published work. See Citati...
Sociologist Professor Chua Beng Huat explains how serial TV dramas have become a soft power currency...
This article discusses the early findings of a research project examining the role of lifestyle tele...
The recent rise of lifestyle TV in Anglophone markets reflects the increasing dominance of an indivi...
Lifestyle television is popular, non-fictional programming that aims to instruct its viewers in ever...
Consumer-oriented television programmes are regularly broadcast programmes covering a wide range of ...
Television is increasingly both global and local. Those television industries discussed in this thes...
More than a decade after television became the medium of mass consumption in the West, Raymond Willi...
This book presents an analysis of television histories across India, China, Taiwan, Singapore, Indon...
In the context of the globalization of television, India and China represent immensely attractive ma...
Challenging assumptions that have underpinned critiques of globalization and combining cultural theo...
Abstract. This study portrays the rapid changing Asian television scene, in broad social processes, ...
television not as the outcome of an isolated aesthetic adventure or technological triumph, but as th...
Globalization of Asian markets has focused attention on the flow of western cultural products into A...
The Asian TV industry is 'unstoppable' reported Variety in 2008, yet still most people living in the...
The attached document may provide the author's accepted version of a published work. See Citati...
Sociologist Professor Chua Beng Huat explains how serial TV dramas have become a soft power currency...
This article discusses the early findings of a research project examining the role of lifestyle tele...
The recent rise of lifestyle TV in Anglophone markets reflects the increasing dominance of an indivi...
Lifestyle television is popular, non-fictional programming that aims to instruct its viewers in ever...
Consumer-oriented television programmes are regularly broadcast programmes covering a wide range of ...
Television is increasingly both global and local. Those television industries discussed in this thes...
More than a decade after television became the medium of mass consumption in the West, Raymond Willi...
This book presents an analysis of television histories across India, China, Taiwan, Singapore, Indon...
In the context of the globalization of television, India and China represent immensely attractive ma...
Challenging assumptions that have underpinned critiques of globalization and combining cultural theo...
Abstract. This study portrays the rapid changing Asian television scene, in broad social processes, ...
television not as the outcome of an isolated aesthetic adventure or technological triumph, but as th...
Globalization of Asian markets has focused attention on the flow of western cultural products into A...
The Asian TV industry is 'unstoppable' reported Variety in 2008, yet still most people living in the...
The attached document may provide the author's accepted version of a published work. See Citati...
Sociologist Professor Chua Beng Huat explains how serial TV dramas have become a soft power currency...