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HKSYU Library

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    200717s2019 maua b 001 0 eng
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    a| 2019005735
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    a| 9780262043175 q| (hardcover)
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    a| (OCoLC)1089968451
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    a| DLC b| eng e| rda c| DLC d| OCLCO d| OCLCF d| YDX d| UtOrBLW d| HK-SYU
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    a| HN740.Z9 b| M345 2019
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    a| 302.230951 2| 23
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    a| 302.230951 b| LI 2019
    100
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    a| Li, Luzhou Nina, e| author
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    1
    0
    a| Zoning China : b| online video, popular culture, and the state / c| Luzhou Li
    264
     
    1
    a| Cambridge : b| The MIT Press, c| 2019
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    4
    c| ©2019
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    a| xv, 296 pages ; c| 24 cm
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    a| text b| txt 2| rdacontent
    337
     
     
    a| unmediated b| n 2| rdamedia
    338
     
     
    a| volume b| nc 2| rdacarrier
    490
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    a| Information policy series
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    a| Includes bibliographical references (pages 257-287) and index
    505
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    a| Introduction -- Culture before the Millennium -- Stay Left : Post-2000 Television Drama Production in China -- Early Online Video : A Political Economic Perspective -- Piracy, Internet Culture, and the Early Online Video Industry -- Bidding on the Rights to Stream : the Industry, Copyright, and New Cultural Flows -- Online Video as an Emerging Network of Cultural Production -- Epilogue: The Operation of a Dual Cultural Sphere ... And?
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    a| WorldShare provided record
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    a| "China is the world's largest market for cultural products, including films produced abroad in the USA and elsewhere. So why is it that just a handful of American movies are imported for theatrical releases in China each year, and anointed by the government to earn massive audiences and box office revenues? Why not more, especially when the same government approves a much larger number of movies for online distribution in China? These and a host of other fascinating questions get answered in this deeply researched account of what the author describes as a policy of cultural zoning. This book analyzes the way in which the Chinese government differently regulates video that is distributed online and video distributed via broadcast, created a "zoned" media environment in which more independence is allowed online than in broadcast. In doing so, the author provides insight into Chinese popular culture and the distinct features of governance in the Chinese environment. Zoning China examines how online video developed as an alternative to television in China in the last two decades"-- c| Provided by publisher
    650
     
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    a| Mass media x| Social aspects z| China
    650
     
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    a| Mass media policy z| China
    650
     
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    a| Television broadcasting policy z| China
    650
     
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    a| Internet videos z| China
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    a| Streaming video z| China
    830
     
    0
    a| Information policy series
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    a| b2083942x b| 08-01-22 c| 17-07-20
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    h| Principal h| Supplement l| location i| barcode y| id f| bookplate a| callnoa b| callnob n| GEB109