The Chinese Censorship Discourse on Television Dramas
eBook - ePub

The Chinese Censorship Discourse on Television Dramas

Worrying about the Audience in Postsocialist China

  1. English
  2. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  3. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

The Chinese Censorship Discourse on Television Dramas

Worrying about the Audience in Postsocialist China

About this book

This book offers a compelling look at how television censorship in China works not just as top-down control but as interactions between state, industry, and viewers.

As a historical study of the discourse on Chinese television censorship, it analyses debates around the censorship of popular television dramas in China and explores the controversies surrounding the televisual representation of history, violence, delinquency, and vulgarisation. Focusing on the idea of "worrying about the audience", the book shows how concerns about young people's morality, social responsibility, and cultural standards shape what (dis)appears on screen. Covering the early reform period to the 2010s, case studies include but are not limited to foreign action series (Garrison's Gorillas), domestic melodramas (Yearnings), controversial historical dramas (Towards the Republic), Gangtai pop idol dramas (Meteor Garden), and playful wuxia comedies (My Own Swordsman). Each case reveals how censors, producers, and critics invoke imagined audiences—whether impressionable youth or patriotic citizens—to justify cutting or promoting content. By treating audiences as constructed categories rather than immutable groups, the book moves beyond seeing censorship as repression. Instead, it demonstrates how a refreshing take on censorship can shed light on the generation of new content, revive overlooked titles, and frame broader debates about culture, anxieties, and geopolitics. Drawing on regulatory documents, press reports, interviews, audience letters, and parents' complaints, the book compares both popular hits and hidden gems, demonstrating how the discourse on melodrama, history, and martial arts genres reflects moral and commercial pressures in postsocialist China.

In contributing to the burgeoning field of censorship studies which rethinks censorship as productive, rather than reductive, The Chinese Censorship Discourse on Television Dramas will be of huge interest to scholars and students of television studies, popular culture, censorship studies, Chinese studies, media studies, cultural studies, memory studies, social history, and politics.

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Information

Publisher
Routledge
Year
2026
eBook ISBN
9781040722701

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Endorsements
  3. Half-Title Page
  4. Series Page
  5. Title Page
  6. Copyright Page
  7. Table of Contents
  8. Acknowledgements
  9. List of Acronyms and Abbreviations
  10. Introduction: Rethinking Censorship as Discourse, Articulatory Practices, Performance, and Dialogic
  11. 1 Historical Context: Worrying about the Television Audience in Postsocialist China
  12. 2 Who’s Afraid of the Big Bad Youth: Disciplining Foreign Influences in Garrison’s Gorillas
  13. 3 When Is China: Playing with History in Tales of Qianlong and Towards the Republic
  14. 4 The Tremulous Hand Lifting Spirits: Contending Tongsu and Vulgarisation in Yearnings
  15. 5 The Bane of Chinese Civilisation: Pruning Gangtai Dramas and Meteor Garden
  16. 6 Disarming the Knight-Errant: Remaking Wuxia in My Own Swordsman
  17. Reflections: The Audience Imagined—Future Research on Censorship in China and Beyond
  18. Index

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Yes, you can access The Chinese Censorship Discourse on Television Dramas by How Wee Ng in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Media & Performing Arts & Media Studies. We have over 1.5 million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.