Media, Sport, Nationalism: East Asia: Soft Power Projection via the Modern Olympic Games. Essays in Honour of Professor J.A.Mangan's Contributions to East Asian Studies

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Tianwei Ren (Hg.), Keiko Ikeda (Hg.), Chang Wan Woo (Hg.), Media, Sport, Nationalism: East Asia: Soft Power Projection via the Modern Olympic Games. Essays in Honour of Professor J.A.Mangan's Contributions to East Asian Studies (2019), Logos Verlag, Berlin, ISBN: 9783832588984

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Beschreibung / Abstract

East Asia is increasingly prominent within global sport. In the short period between 2018 and 2022 it will have held two Winter and one Summer Olympics, and the Rugby World Cup for good measure. This is not a sudden development. It has been in train for some time, although many scholars, especially in Europe and North America, have been focussed primarily on sport in their own countries and regions. J.A. Mangan, who for decades has been looking closely at sport in East Asia while encouraging others to do likewise, has made a major contribution to knowledge and understanding of a once under-appreciated subject. This excellent collection in his honour analyses the key interwoven elements of sport, media and nation in China, Japan and South Korea. It demonstrates how the structure and practice of sport connects in myriad ways with its representation, not least with regard to national narratives, international rivalries and transnational trends. It is a book that does signal justice both to East Asian Studies and to the academic who recognised the importance of sport to that field, and who has done so much to ensure that the region is centrally placed within any contemporary analysis of the world of sport.

David Rowe, Emeritus Professor of Cultural Research, Institute for Culture and Society, Western Sydney University

Professor Mangan is the master dissector of the connections between sport and politics, geopolitics and nationalism across multiple Asian contexts. A collection of essays in honour of his long service to academic understandings of these fields is well deserved, and the editors and contributors to this volume have served up a worthy tribute. Showcasing new work by a stellar cast of China, Japan and Korea experts, in combination the papers collected here yield valuable insights into the issues of nation building, identity, media representation and sport which have been the subject of Professor Mangan's pioneering work over the past several decades. No one has done more to put East Asia on the map in terms of academic research on the manifold socio-political dimensions of sport, and this superbly constructed volume orchestrated by rising Tianwei Ren confirms that we neglect this fascinating, complex region at our peril.

Jonathan Sullivan, Director of China Policy Institute and China Soccer Observatory, Associate Professor, School of Politics and IR. University of Nottingham

Beschreibung

Tianwei Ren is International Coordinator, Faculty of International Media, Communication University of China (CUC). B.A. from Nanjing University, China, M.Sc. from the London School of Economics and Political Science, Ph.D. candidate of Party School of the Central Committee of CPC. She is a commissioning editor of the journal Global Media and China, and is involved in academic liaison and editing for many publications. Her research interests include the construction of political and social image and identity via the modern media, particularly the media as means of national projection, representation and identity in a period of increasing acceleration of the East Asian nations to the centre of the world stage.

Keiko Ikeda is a Professor in the Faculty of Education at Hokkaido University, Sapporo, Japan, where she specializes in, Educational and Social Developmental Studies. Professor Ikeda researches and publishes in a wide area including topics
stemming from the history of sport (particularly British and Japanese), sport journalism and feminism in sport. She has been a visiting Fellow at the Centre for the Study of Social History at University of Warwick, and in the International Centre for Sport History at De Montfort University. Since 2009 Professor Ikeda has been a member of ISHPES Council and is currently Vice-President of ISHPES since 2017.

Chang Wan Woo, Ph.D. (The University of Alabama, U.S.A.) is an associate professor in the School of Communication Studies at James Madison University, where he teaches public relations courses including Sports Public Relations, Public Relations Management, and Public Relations Campaign. Chang Wan is a founding member of the International Association for Communication and Sports and currently serves as a coordinator for the sport communication minor program at JMU and a faculty adviser of the JMU Chapter of the Public Relations Student Society of America.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

  • BEGINN
  • PREAMBLE
  • National Ambitions, Regional Geopolitics, Soft Power Impacts (William W. Kelly)
  • PROLOGUE
  • New East Asia: New Media Images, New Nationalisms (Tianwei Ren)
  • CHINA
  • 1. The Nationalist Construction of Chinese Olympians: Media, Change, Reform (Richard Xiaoqian Hu and Junjian Liang)
  • N/A
  • 3. National Renaissance, International Assertion, New Global Image: China and the Modern Olympic Games: Media Opportunities for the Projection of a Forceful Nationalism (Ying Jiang)
  • JAPAN
  • 4. Democracy through the Lens of Sports Journalism: Japan and the East Asian Olympic Games (Keiko Ikeda)
  • 5. Media Representation Transformed: from Unconditional Affirmation to Critical Consideration: The Tokyo Olympics 1964 and 2020 (Christian Tagsold)
  • 6. Continuity or Change: After the Tokyo Olympic Games 1964: Exploring the Tokyo Games 2020 through various Critical Reviews (Tyrel Eskelson)
  • SOUTH KOREA
  • 7. Is It the Same Olympic Games? Comparison between 1988 Seoul Summer Olympics and 2018 PyeongChangWinter Olympic Games (Chang Wan Woo and Mikyung Bae)
  • N/A
  • 9. Seoul 1988: Making of a Nation-the Media and a Mega-Event (Kyoungho Park and Gwang Ok)
  • INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES
  • N/A
  • 11. Soft Power Projection via the Olympic Games: Sport as Geopolitical Diplomacy (Paul Michael Brannagan and Jonathan Grix)
  • 12. The Beijing Olympics: Retrospective Reflection on the Impact of the Global Media (Susan Brownell)
  • EPILOGUE
  • Media, Soft Power, Olympic Images: Eastern Renaissance (Tianwei Ren)
  • CODA
  • N/A

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