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dc.contributor.authorRitika Pantvi
dc.date.accessioned2025-08-04T08:51:10Z-
dc.date.available2025-08-04T08:51:10Z-
dc.date.issued2022-
dc.identifier.citationAsian Journal of Communication. - 2022. - Vol.20, No.2. - P.165 - 179vi
dc.identifier.urihttp://elib.hcmussh.edu.vn/handle/HCMUSSH/142757-
dc.description.abstractGlobalization and transnationalism have expanded the physical ter-ritory of television and are responsible for global reshaping of media industries and cultures. In the contemporary mediascape, Indian television industry is an interesting site for excavating new transna-tional patterns wherein the circulation of Indian TV content extends beyond the diaspora and caters to non-diasporic audiences, espe-cially, in South Asia and South-east Asia. The popularity of Hindi language TV soaps in Indonesia, Vietnam, Sri Lanka, etc., have aided in mapping a new ‘tele’-visual geography of popular culture that deems Western media influence as almost insignificant, if not absent. Chronicling the success of two Indian TV programmes – the story of a ‘child-bride’ Balika Vadhu (2008–16) in Vietnam and a Hindu mythological Mahabharat (2013–14) in a Muslim- populated Indonesia; this paper traces the transnational circulation of Indian TV content amongst non-diasporic markets in South-east Asia. Drawing from Daya Kishan Thussu’s notion of ‘contra-flows’ and Brian Larkin’s conception of ‘parallel modernities’, the paper argues that the success of Indian television programmes in non-West media markets diverts our attention towards new kinds of transnational media flows which I have termed ‘neo-global’ flows that operate amongst emerging centres of media production and need not be mapped against dominant Western flows.vi
dc.language.isoenvi
dc.publisherTaylor & Francisvi
dc.subjectIndian televisionvi
dc.subjectSouth Asiavi
dc.subjectSouth-east Asiavi
dc.subjectContent syndicationvi
dc.subjectNeo-globalvi
dc.subjectTransnationalvi
dc.subjectMedia flowsvi
dc.subjectSoap operasvi
dc.subjectMedia capitalvi
dc.subject.ddc300vi
dc.titleFrom global to neo-global: Mapping the ‘tele’-visual geography of South Asia through a transnational lensvi
dc.typeArticlevi
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