1st Edition

Political Regimes and the Media in Asia

Edited By Krishna Sen, Terence Lee Copyright 2008
    248 Pages
    by Routledge

    248 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book analyzes the relationship between political power and the media in a range of nation states in East and Southeast Asia, focusing in particular on the place of the media in authoritarian and post-authoritarian regimes. It discusses the centrality of media in sustaining repressive regimes, and the key role of the media in the transformation and collapse of such regimes. It questions in particular the widely held beliefs, that the state can have complete control over the media consumption of its citizens, that commercialization of the media necessarily leads to democratization, and that the transnational, liberal dimensions of western media are crucial for democratic movements in Asia. Countries covered include Burma, China, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, the Philippines and Vietnam.

    1. Mediating Political Transition in Asia  Krishna Sen  2. ‘Chinese Party Publicity Inc.’ Conglomerated: The Case of the Shenzhen Press Group  Chin-Chuan Lee, Zhou He and Yu Huang  3. The Curse of the Everyday: Politics of Representation and New Social Semiotics in Post-socialist China Wanning Sun  4. The Emergence of Polyphony in Chinese Television Documentaries Yingchi Chu  5. Vietnamese Cinema in the Era of Market Liberalization Chuong-Dai Hong Vo  6. ‘Not a rice-eating robot’: Freedom to Speak in Burma Nancy Hudson-Rodd  7. Revolutionary Scripts: Shan Insurgent Media Practice at the Thai-Burma Border Jane M. Ferguson  8. Thai Media and the Thaksin Ork pai (Get out!) Movement Glen Lewis  9. Framing The Fight Against Terror: Order versus Liberty in Singapore and Malaysia Cherian George  10. Regime, Media and the Reconstruction of a Fragile Consensus in Malaysia Zaharom Nain  11. Gestural Politics: Mediating the ‘New’ Singapore Terence Lee  12. Media and Politics in Regional Indonesia: The Case of Manado David T. Hill  13. Out There: Citizens, Audiences and the Mediatization of the 2004 Indonesian Election Philip Kitley

     

    Biography

    Krishna Sen holds the chair of Asian Media at Curtin University of Technology and is a member of the International Advisory Board of the Asia Research Centre at Murdoch University, Australia. She has published many books and articles on the Indonesia media, and other aspects of Indonesian culture and politics.

    Terence Lee is an Associate Professor of Mass Communication in the School of Media Communication & Culture and a Research Fellow of the Asia Research Centre at Murdoch University, Australia. He has published widely on various aspects of the media, politics and the creative industries in Singapore.