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Back Issues: 2001

#46: Media in Asia
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KJ's first "Virtual Bookzine"

Smoke and Mirrors — introducing this issue, Stewart Wachs: "We who work in media are among those souls whose perceptions of life are shaped by what media does. If in the past the media was often likened to a mirror, then today it is a hall of mirrors, multiplying to infinity..."

Digital Dream or Digital Dystopia — Douglas Bullis on the future of the Internet in Asia:

"The cheerily optimistic new world of Digitopia celebrates itself as a medium possessing a mix of skills and purpose that can reinvent the world around it. If it does, the result could be a humanity the world has never seen before. Can it deliver?"


The Inner Teacher — Anuradha Vittachi on children and the Net:

"It has been calculated that it would cost US $4 billion to educate 500 million Indian children conventionally to basic level — but only half that via the Net..."


Media Virus — Douglas Rushkoff on social evolution in the datasphere

Local TV... after the Big Bang — Nakamura Koji interviewed by Jeff Irish)

Media Critic Asano Kenichi — interviewed by Stewart Wachs:

"Japan's press is at once too free and too controlled. It lacks the self-restraint essential to protect individuals' integrity and privacy, yet it also fails to assert itself as a watchdog of the authorities..."

Media Immediacy: Asia Online: KJ's new ongoing annotated introduction to Asian Internet resources — portals, news, media watchdogs, NGOs, cinema, history, and more... providing immediate access to diverse "perspectives on Asia" via the following pages:

Local Asia Online — notable websites from the following countries:

Bangladesh | Burma | Cambodia | China | India | Indonesia | Japan | Korea | Laos | Malaysia | Mongolia | Nepal | Pakistan | Singapore | Sri Lanka | Taiwan | Thailand | The Philippines  | Tibet | Timor | Vietnam

The Pull of the Immediate — Pico Iyer on why we don't need media

The Warmth of the Herd — Walter Hamilton on Japanese news media, an essay from the bookLosing Control: Freedom of the Press in Asia
Perspectives Omitted, Questions Unasked — Ron Rhodes on Japanese newspapers

Media Critic Asano Kenichi — excerpts from an interview by Stewart Wachs

Cracked Mirror — Eric Johnston on Western media perceptions of Japan since Marco Polo:

"A New York Times or Independent piece on elevator girls and teenage prostitution, or a BBC piece espousing the latest electronic gizmos in Japan have much more of an impact on public policy than less influential, but better informed, media reports on the problems of Japan’s elderly or the criminal negligence of the country’s nuclear power industry."

Radio Free Burma — Chris Tenove on fostering dissent — and fear?

Emerging from Chaos — Judith Clarke on budding Cambodian journalism

Making Print History in War-torn Cambodia — Michael Hayes builds a newspaper from scratch

Covering Conflict — Sally McLaren interviews Asia correspondent Richard Lloyd Parry

Culture Jammer's Guide to Enlightenment — Gabriele Hadl talks with Adbusters' Kalle Lasn

Hidden Japan — Andy Couturier gets an offer from the Discovery Channel

Nexus of Notoriety — Philip Brasor on where media and celebrities meet in Japan

Seoul Stirring Again — Donato Totaro on Korean cinema's second new wave

Diversity Spawning Unity — Karen Mazurkewich tells why cinema is going pan-Asian

Making Audiences — Donald Richie on Japanese film as event

Encounters:
    Korea: I Spy — Learning from Pyongyang TV, Philip J. Cunningham

    Japan: Scenes from a Newsroom, Paul Baylis

Fiction: The Sunset-Colored Simca, by Itsuki Hiroyuki, trans. Ralph F.  McCarthy

Reviews
Ramble: Robert Brady on why the cloud is a rabbit

Voices
Guest Artists: Rimi Yang, Thierry Le


Theme Issues

Street, Just Deeds, Transience, Media in Asia, Time, Transforming Conflict, Inaka, Orthodoxy & Heresy, Word, Sacred Mountains of Asia, The Death & Resurrection of Kyoto, Radicalism of Cultural Continuity, Neighborhoods, Allure of the Exotic, Kyoto Speaks, Eros, Japan in the Year 2020


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