Edinburgh Research Archive

Mediated music, mediated nations: Taiwanese popular music in China

dc.contributor.advisor
Prior, Nicholas
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dc.contributor.advisor
Darmon, Isabelle
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dc.contributor.author
Huang, Chun-Ming
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dc.date.accessioned
2018-03-26T11:28:26Z
dc.date.available
2018-03-26T11:28:26Z
dc.date.issued
2018-07-09
dc.description.abstract
Taiwan’s pop music is enormously popular in China. This study aims to probe the reasons for this success as it has taken place against a backdrop of hostile political relations between the Taiwanese and the Chinese. The study explores the ways in which Chinese people and the Chinese media have negotiated and practised the work of ‘imagined communities’ through the consumption of Taiwan’s pop. It focuses on the cultural-political struggles of Taiwan’s pop in China, its mediation, and consumption as a cultural practice. The study suggests that deliberative mediation and a sociable mediation are able to coexist through the process of music consumption. The study has used a variety of research methods, including semi-structured interviews of Chinese audience-members; documentary, media and historical analysis; desk research; and a six-month period of observation in Beijing. It examines the experiences of 26 Chinese audience members living in Beijing or Taiwan who are fans of the ‘Little Freshness’ style of music. Four important media texts are discussed: 1) Chinese Central Television’s (CCTV’s) New Year’s Gala (1984–2014); 2) the magazine People’s Music(1980–2007); 3) Li Wan’s book, How Much Time has Gone By, the Forgotten Sorrow: Sixty years of Songs Across Three Places: China’s Mainland, Hong Kong and Taiwan (2012); 4) Zhang Lixian’s edited volume, Archaisms: Luo Dayou (2000). Using the concept of mediation, the study highlights the significance of a ‘structure of feeling’ (Williams, 1961) to identify how the ‘multi-mediated’ process of consumption of Taiwan’s pop is made up of emotion, conflict and negotiation from the interplay of relations between Taiwan and China. This has emerged as a combination of musical mediation and political mediation, a combination which, in turn, moved from the cultural consumption of Taiwan’s pop towards the practice of the political. The study reflects on related approaches to see their limits and problems when applied to the study of Taiwan and China, and proposes that music consumption requires the engagement of the biographies of both the audience-members and the musical work in order to ‘activate’ the social use of music. It draws on Williams’s concept of common culture as well as Mouffe’s idea of agonistic pluralism to suggest that participation in, and interpretation of, Taiwan’s pop may further propel both Taiwan and China towards commonly held, yet contested, cultures - in other words, that their citizens may come to possess plural cultural citizenships.
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dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/28985
dc.language.iso
en
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
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dc.relation.hasversion
Huang, Chun-Ming (2008) ‘Spin and Anti-spin in Taiwan: A Study of Resistance and Complicity from the Perspective of Journalism’, MSc thesis, London School of Economics and Political Science.
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Huang, Chun-Ming (2010 [2015]) Music: Culture, Politics and Performance. Taipei: Culturespeak
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dc.relation.hasversion
Huang, Chun-ming (2014) ‘Little Freshness Saving China’, Muzik, February.
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Huang, Chun-ming (2014) ‘Spring Gala: Talk with Fan Yuwen’, Muzik, March
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dc.rights.embargodate
2026-07-09
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dc.subject
China
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dc.subject
Taiwan
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dc.subject
mediation
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dc.subject
cultural politics
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dc.subject
consumption
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dc.subject
nations
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dc.subject
pop music
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political identity
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dc.title
Mediated music, mediated nations: Taiwanese popular music in China
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dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
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dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
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dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
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dcterms.accessRights
RESTRICTED ACCESS
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