- Type: Lecture by Chua Beng Huat
- When: Monday, September 26, 6:30pm
- Venue: Wood Theatre, Economics and Commerce Building
- URL: http://melbourneuniv-web.ungerboeck.com/coe/coe_p2_details.aspx?oc=10&cc=COE&eventid=6887
Pop Culture is part of the export industry of every East Asia location – Korea, Japan, Taiwan, China and Hong Kong. In every instance, except perhaps Hong Kong, the national government has been financially and institutionally supporting the local pop culture industry because the latter has come to see the pop culture industry as an instrument of ‘soft power’. At stake is apparently not just financial returns from investments in pop culture production but also to positively ‘influence’ the attitudes of the audience in the target/importing countries. This is particularly significant against the back drop of historical animosities between the East Asian nations, which continues to fuel public expressions of international antagonism on the ground, often with the complicity of the local government. This presentation will discuss the current state of competition among China, Japan and Korea. (Supported by the Macgeorge Bequest).