1st Edition
The Chinese Censorship Discourse on Television Dramas Worrying about the Audience in Postsocialist China
Introduction: Rethinking Censorship as Discourse, Articulatory Practices, Performance, and Dialogic
1. Historical Context: Worrying about the Television Audience in Postsocialist China
2. Who’s Afraid of the Big Bad Youth: Disciplining Foreign Influences in Garrison’s Gorillas
3. When Is China: Playing with History in Tales of Qianlong and Towards the Republic
4. The Tremulous Hand Lifting Spirits: Contending Tongsu and Vulgarisation in Yearnings
5. The Bane of Chinese Civilisation: Pruning Gangtai Dramas and Meteor Garden
6. Disarming the Knight-Errant: Remaking Wuxia in My Own Swordsman
Reflections: The Audience Imagined—Future Research on Censorship in China and Beyond
Biography
How Wee Ng is Senior Lecturer in Chinese Studies at the University of Westminster, UK, and co-founder of the Association for Curators and Programmers of Asian Cinemas (ACPAC). He specialises in cinemas, media and theatres of the Sinosphere, film curation, censorship, and the politics of representation in visual culture.
“This is a brilliant contribution to scholarship on censorship and mass media, impeccably attentive to the breadth and complexity of the topic. Its rich insights rest on a foundation of deep knowledge of and long-term engagement with Chinese media. It will be essential reading for scholars of contemporary Chinese culture and politics.”
Julia Lovell, Birkbeck, University of London, UK
“In this highly original and meticulously researched study, Dr How Wee Ng dissects the public debates about television censorship in post-Mao China, showing that censorship does not make things disappear but rather makes visible the anxieties about the impact of TV drama on its viewers in a rapidly changing society.”
Michel Hockx, University of Notre Dame, USA
“The Chinese Censorship Discourse on Television Dramas is not only the first history of Chinese television censorship in English but also rethinks Chinese censorship as an active and dialogic process of shaping and forming production and reception. The result is an exciting breakthrough in Chinese media studies.”
Chris Berry, King’s College London, UK






