Ruoyun Bai, Staging Corruption: Chinese Television And Politics

BOOK REVIEW: Reading Bai Ruoyun’s book Staging Corruption: Chinese Television and Politics is even more fascinating while watching the 55-episode anti-corruption television drama In the Name of the People (Renmin de mingyi 人民的名义). This top-rating serial, created to spotlight Xi Jinping’s crackdow...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gong, Qian
Format: Journal Article
Published: French Centre for Research on Contemporary China 2017
Online Access:http://www.cefc.com.hk/article/ruoyun-bai-staging-corruption-chinese-television-and-politics/
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/62667
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Summary:BOOK REVIEW: Reading Bai Ruoyun’s book Staging Corruption: Chinese Television and Politics is even more fascinating while watching the 55-episode anti-corruption television drama In the Name of the People (Renmin de mingyi 人民的名义). This top-rating serial, created to spotlight Xi Jinping’s crackdown on corruption, attracted millions of viewers. Many saw it as resurrecting a genre that had been in decline since 2004, when the government suddenly slapped a ban on the topic. The popularity of the serial serves as a footnote to how important the anti-corruption genre has been in public discourse, as well as its continuing relevance to Chinese society today. One can’t help but admire Bai’s foresight in writing a book that illuminates the evolution of the anti-corruption genre and how this issue is embedded in Chinese society. Overall, I found Bai’s account insightful, ingenious, and interesting.