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Book Cover
Book
Author Sun, Wanning, 1963-

Title Leaving China : media, migration, and transnational imagination / Wanning Sun
Published Lanham : Rowman & Littlefield, [2002]
©2002

Copies

Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 MELB  302.230951 Sun/Lcm  AVAILABLE
Description x, 243 pages ; 24 cm
Series World social change
World social change.
Contents Introduction: Leaving China -- 1. Going Home or Going Places: Television in the Village -- 2. Going Abroad or Staying Home: Cinema, Fantasy, and the World City -- 3. Arriving at the Global City: Television Dramas and Spatial Imagination -- 4. Haggling in the Margin: Videotapes and Paradiasporic Audiences -- 5. Fantasizing the Homeland: The Internet, Memory, and Exilic Longings -- 6. Eating Food and Telling Stories: From Home(land) to Homepage -- 7. Fragmenting the National Time-Space: Media Events in the Satellite Age -- 8. Chinese in the Global Village: Olympics and an Electronic Nation -- Conclusion: Toward a Transnational China?
Summary More than ever before, China is on the move. When the flow of people and images is fused, meanings of self, place, space, community, and nation become unstable and contestable. This book explores the ways in which movement within and across the national borders of the PRC has influenced the imagination of the Chinese people, both those who remain and those who have left. Travelers or no, all participate in the production and consumption of images and narratives of travel, thus contributing to the formation of transnational subjectivities. Wanning Sun offers an analysis of the significant narrative forms and discursive strategies used in representing transnational space in contemporary China. This includes looking at how stay-at-homes fantasize about faraway or unknown places, and how those in the diaspora remember experiences of familiar places. She considers the ways in which mobility-of people, capital, and images-affects localities through individuals' constructions of a sense of place. Relatedly, the author illustrates how economic, social, and political forces either facilitate or inhibit the formation of a particular kind of transnational subjectivity. [publisher]
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 219-229) and index
Subject Mass media -- China.
Migration, Internal -- China.
Chinese -- Foreign countries -- Communication.
SUBJECT China -- Emigration and immigration. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh2008114676
LC no. 2002001948
ISBN 0742517977 :
0742517969