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This book analyzes the ways in which China's soft power growth
faces dilemmas in East Asia through both online and offline
platforms. One dilemma for China's transnational soft power-field
expansion lies in the intersection of its source and receiving
countries. The author discusses how transnational audiences'
consumption and reception of Chinese television series are shaped
by domestic factors, with interpretations of and desires for
different forms of capital, further inhibiting the foreign export
of these series. Another dilemma is the "outsourced soft power."
While Hong Kong and Taiwan play significant roles as outsourced
soft power mediators, their under-established emerging digital
media platforms have yet to meet the expectations of transnational
audiences in a virtual transnational soft power field. Grounded in
the author's multi-site field research focused on television
spheres, Soft Power Made in China argues that China's soft power
paradox in South Korea and Japan-two quasi-Sinophone countries-is
not due to a lack of state-level strategy, but linked to soft power
pathways that rely on production in one source country, and both
distribution and reception in a receiving country.
This book analyzes the ways in which China's soft power growth
faces dilemmas in East Asia through both online and offline
platforms. One dilemma for China's transnational soft power-field
expansion lies in the intersection of its source and receiving
countries. The author discusses how transnational audiences'
consumption and reception of Chinese television series are shaped
by domestic factors, with interpretations of and desires for
different forms of capital, further inhibiting the foreign export
of these series. Another dilemma is the "outsourced soft power."
While Hong Kong and Taiwan play significant roles as outsourced
soft power mediators, their under-established emerging digital
media platforms have yet to meet the expectations of transnational
audiences in a virtual transnational soft power field. Grounded in
the author's multi-site field research focused on television
spheres, Soft Power Made in China argues that China's soft power
paradox in South Korea and Japan-two quasi-Sinophone countries-is
not due to a lack of state-level strategy, but linked to soft power
pathways that rely on production in one source country, and both
distribution and reception in a receiving country.
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