04208nam 2200505zu 450 991013400940332120230912134953.00-9804648-9-7(CKB)9870000000000671(SSID)ssj0000509920(PQKBManifestationID)12159507(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000509920(PQKBWorkID)10572699(PQKB)10861449EBL6978169(AU-PeEL)EBL6978169(MiAaPQ)EBC6978169(Exl-AI)6978169(EXLCZ)99987000000000067120160829d2010 uy engur|n|---|||||txtccrComplicated Currents: Media Flows, Soft Power and East Asia[Place of publication not identified]Monash University Publishing20101 online resource (264 p.)Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph0-9804648-8-9 Title page -- Copyright and imprint information -- About the editors -- Contents -- Introduction -- Part 1 – Soft Power, Media Texts and Imagining the Other -- 1. Distant land, neighbouring land: ‘Japan’ in South Korean popular discourse -- 2. The Korean Wave and anti-Korean discourse in Japan: A genealogy of popular representations of Korea 1984–2005 -- 3. Winter Sonata and the politics of memory -- 4. ‘Hand in hand’: Sino-Korean musical exchange in the Korean Wave -- 5. Cross-cultural interactions through mass media products: Cognitive and emotional impacts of Chinese people’s consumption of Korean media products -- Part 2 – Embodying the Korean Wave -- 6. Consuming Japan: Early Korean girls comic book artists’ resistance and empowerment -- 7. Buying youth: Japanese fandom of the Korean Wave -- 8. Chogukjeok pan-East Asian soft masculinity: Reading ‘Boys over Flowers’, ‘Coffee Prince’ and Shinhwa fan fiction -- 9. Hallyu ballyhoo and Harisu: Marketing and representing the transgendered in South Korea -- Part 3 – Wave Mechanics: Media Production and Soft Power -- 10. Inroads for cultural traffic: Breeding Korea’s cinematiger -- 11. Creating a different wave: Animating a market for Korean animation -- 12. The success and limitations of Japanese comics and animation in the US: Can Korean manhwa and animation follow suit? -- 13. Remaking the Korean romcom: A case study of Yeopgijeogin geunyeo and My Sassy Girl -- Part 4 – Undertow: The Significance of Media Flows and Soft Power -- 14. Re-imagining China’s future: Soft power, cultural presence and the East Asian media market -- 15. The limits of soft power -- 16. Cultural exchange and national specificity -- List of contributorsGenerated by AI.Complicated Currents: Media Flows, Soft Power and East Asia is a scholarly examination of the dynamic interplay between media, culture, and soft power in the East Asian context. Edited by Daniel Black, Stephen Epstein, and Alison Tokita, this volume explores the impact of transnational media flows on national identity, cultural exchange, and international relations. The book delves into phenomena such as the Korean Wave and its influence across Asia and beyond, analyzing how media products like television dramas and pop music contribute to cultural diplomacy and national branding. It also addresses the complexities of media consumption in a globalized world, highlighting both the opportunities and challenges posed by these flows. This work is intended for scholars, students, and readers interested in media studies, cultural studies, and Asian studies.Generated by AI.Mass media and transnationalismGenerated by AISoft power (Political science)Generated by AIMass media and transnationalism.Soft power (Political science)306.095Tokita Alison1235418Black DanielEpstein StephenPQKBBOOK9910134009403321Complicated Currents: Media Flows, Soft Power and East Asia2869462UNINA