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[ecrea] Call for Papers "India, China and the Future of the Media"
Sat Nov 08 20:43:49 GMT 2014
call for papers
“India, China and the future of the media”
Hong Kong Baptist University 12th – 14th March 2015
China and India are the two most populous countries in the world, and
both are experiencing fast economic development and rapid social
change. Despite different political systems and economic structures,
they are both leading forces in the “BRICS” group of nations and they
aspire to play a bigger role internationally, in culture as much as in
international relations. These developments have led increasing numbers
of scholars to begin comparative research on different aspects of the
two societies, including their media and communication activities. This
colloquium aims to build upon that work by bringing together Indian and
Chinese scholars, as well as interested others, to discuss major points
of similarity and difference between the two countries.
We have provisionally identified three major themes
that we believe are central to this subject and we invite prospective
participants to submit English-language abstracts of around 500 words
outlining what contribution they envisage making to such a colloquium.
Proposals may focus on one country or compare the situation in both.
The three themes are:
1. The future of the media: The legacy media of the
press and broadcasting in both India and China have developed, at least
until very recently, in the opposite direction to those in the developed
world. The circulation of newspapers in the developed world has been
declining for years and in the last decade advertising revenue has
flooded on to the internet, seldom being captured by the online editions
of print newspapers. For years in China and India newspaper circulation
has been growing rapidly and advertising revenues have remained
buoyant. Very recently, in both countries, circulation has faltered and
the share of advertising going online has risen rapidly, albeit from a
small base. In broadcasting, the number of television channels has
increased sharply in both countries, in both cases driven by rising
advertising revenues. In the developed world, the revenue balance
within broadcasting is shifting from free-to-view to subscription
services, with attendant changes in the nature of programming, while
online consumption of audio-visual media through sites like YouTube and
Hulu is increasing. Subscription has long provided a mechanism for
access to broadcast signals in China and India but as yet there are few
examples of high-value subscription channels. The differences between
the social structures of the advanced world and China and India
(urbanisation, the shift from agriculture to industry, the modernization
of the service sector, rising educational levels and greater disposable
income) as well as the different cultural traditions of the two
countries, mean that it is unlikely that the experiences of the
developed world will be reproduced in exactly the same way in either
country, but it is by no means certain that the existing models of media
can continue without modification. We invite papers that examine
existing trends in the production, consumption and financing of legacy
media and which suggest ways in which they might change in the future.
2. The role of social media: The mass usage of the
internet came relatively late to both China and India, but growth has
been explosive. Today, China has the largest internet-using population
in the world and the number of Indians online, although much smaller, is
growing rapidly. In both countries, the huge numbers involved are in
large measure a function of the huge populations in these countries and
in both the rate of penetration remains relatively low as compared to
some countries in the advanced world. For both, the digital divide in
its simplest form of access to the technology remains a central reality,
but in many other aspects there are major differences. Whereas India
has been distinguished for its active participation in the international
computer industry, China has been more concerned with the production of
nationally-based software. In both countries, however, the social media
are important and expanding parts of public communication, providing new
mechanisms through which people can talk with each other and find an
audience for their creative productions. As everywhere in the world,
social media embody the whole gamut of human activity – from fashion and
food to romance and politics – but they are embedded in societies with
very different cultural traditions and political structures. We invite
papers that examine the role of social media in all aspects of social
life, including issues of governance, everyday life, and social action.
3. The projection of national soft power: Both India
and China have rich and long-established cultures, and both have long
records of international cultural influence. For many years, however,
the international exchange of culture has been predominantly a one-way
process, from the advanced world, and particularly the USA, towards the
developing world. Hollywood films and television programmes, the
English language, and the education systems of the developed world have
been the dominant cultural forces in almost every country in the world.
There have always been currents that ran in the opposite direction, but
recent developments have led to their substantial strengthening. These
developments are usually given the label, borrowed from Joseph Nye, of
an increase in the soft power of the two countries. In the case of
India, the best-established and most familiar cultural exports have been
cinema films, universally known as Bollywood cinema. For many years,
their primary audience was amongst the Indian diaspora but increasingly
they have won a wider audience in a range of different markets. In the
Chinese case, the last few years have seen a very substantial government
investment in various attempts to increase the country’s soft power. As
well as efforts to export cinema films, new international radio and
television news channels have been launched in English and other
languages, and a large number of Confucius Institutes, teaching the
Chinese language and promoting Chinese culture, have been established
around the world. If Western culture still dominates in most fields,
today it faces an increasing challenge. We invite papers that look at
the success and failures of these efforts at spreading Indian and
Chinese cultures internationally and at the future prospects for
changing the overall balance in these fields.
We envisage this colloquium to be a small working meeting of around 20
scholars from India and China, all of whom will present a paper.
Contacts between individuals working in the two countries have been
relatively infrequent and we believe that one of the important outcomes
of a meeting like this will be the chance for everyone to become more
familiar with their counterparts in the other country. Unlike the
bigger international conferences, we expect everyone who attends not
only to present their own paper but to attend all of the sessions and
join the discussion of the other papers. We hope that the conference
will help us all to explore future avenues for research and that at the
end of the conference new partnerships and collaborations will be under
active discussion.
Hong Kong is an excellent place to begin such an exchange. It prides
itself on being “Asia’s world city” and it is a lively and cosmopolitan
environment with a vigorous civic life. The city is part of China and
shares its majority language and culture with the mainland while
enjoying a special constitutional arrangement which means that there is
much less direct political intervention into either the media or
universities. At the same time, it shares with India many echoes of its
British colonial past. For example, English is the main language of
instruction in Hong Kong universities. It has a substantial and
long-established Indian community who play an important role in many
aspects of the city’s life.
If you are interested in an invitation to this event,
please send your abstract by email to either Ms Swati Maheshwari
((swati.maheswari /at/ gmail.com)) or Ms Lo Wai Han ((janetlo85 /at/ gmail.com)) by
7th December 2014. Successful proposers will be notified within one
week and full papers will be required by 19th January 2015
Colin Sparks
“The law, in its majestic equality, forbids the rich as well as the poor
to sleep under bridges, to beg in the streets, and to steal bread.”
Anatole France
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