art studies 151 report - southeast asian media

4
Art Studies 151: Group Report on Southeast Asian Media (Advertisement) WF 4-5:30 nd Semester 013-014 !ro"# $orma Respi%io ABSTRACT As a re&ion %omprised o" %ountries that are 'ar&e' di""erent e%ause o" thei nationa' e*perien%e and memor + it is di""i%u't to identi" a de"initive Southeas %hara%ter aside "rom its diversit # A shared %o'onia' e*perien%e "rom ,ur ho ever+ unites the re&ion as the "a%e severa' post%o'onia' issues su%h as the "o nationa' identit independent o" a prevai'in& %o'onia' in"'uen%e# .ne o" the most prominent devi%es that the %o'onia' po ers have emp'o ed is m media+a term that re"ers to various %ommuni%ative "orms su%h as "i'm and road%ast %ommuni%ation# /he dominan%e o" mass media and the risin& so%ia' media p'at"orm i Southeast Asia is a s mptom o" the preva'ent &rasp o" the West around su version o" this he&emoni% ho'd e%omes the aim o" various mass media pra%tition "i'mma ers+ ho uti'i e the %inemati% "orm to %ontri ute to the "ormation o" a na "or these Southeast Asian %ountries# Another mani"estation o" mass media is "ound in advertisin&+ a %ommuni%ative aims to se'' produ%ts to its vie ers# Advertisin& is primari' emp'o ed Western %orporations# As su%h+ the "orm simi'ar' %arries Western ideo'o&ies as those seen Advertisin& e%omes an avenue "or the e*p'oitation o" %u'ture ithin the %apita'ist mu'tinationa' %ompanies appropriate indi&enous sensi i'ities as a means produ%ts more mar eta 'e# Southeast Asian Mass Media /he "orma' re%o&nition o" Southeast Asia as a re&ion throu&h the esta 'ishmen Asso%iation o" Southeast Asian $ations (AS,A$) in Au&ust 12 entai's the deve'opm

Upload: daniel-devela

Post on 06-Oct-2015

217 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Reflection Paper on Southeast Asian Media by Rissa Lucero and Jessy Tan

TRANSCRIPT

Art Studies 151: Group Report on Southeast Asian Media (Advertisement)WF 4-5:302nd Semester 2013-2014Prof. Norma Respicio

ABSTRACT As a region comprised of countries that are largely different because of their varied national experience and memory, it is difficult to identify a definitive Southeast Asian cultural character aside from its diversity. A shared colonial experience from European countries, however, unites the region as they face several postcolonial issues such as the formation of a national identity independent of a prevailing colonial influence.One of the most prominent devices that the colonial powers have employed is mass media, a term that refers to various communicative forms such as film and broadcast communication. The dominance of mass media and the rising social media platform within Southeast Asia is a symptom of the prevalent grasp of the West around the region. The subversion of this hegemonic hold becomes the aim of various mass media practitioners such as filmmakers, who utilize the cinematic form to contribute to the formation of a national identity for these Southeast Asian countries. Another manifestation of mass media is found in advertising, a communicative tool that aims to sell products to its viewers. Advertising is primarily employed by Western multinational corporations. As such, the form similarly carries Western ideologies as those seen in other media. Advertising becomes an avenue for the exploitation of culture within the region, as these capitalist multinational companies appropriate indigenous sensibilities as a means to make their products more marketable.

Southeast Asian Mass MediaThe formal recognition of Southeast Asia as a region through the establishment of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) in August 1967 entails the development of a particular identity representative of all its members. As an organization initially formed by Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore and Thailand subsequently expanded to include Brunei, Burma (Myanmar), Cambodia, Laos, and Vietnam, ASEAN faces the difficulty of projecting an individual character that unites all of its member nations because of the regions cultural diversity. This constraint is addressed by the organization by restricting its focus on economic and political unity among the nations through the acceleration of economic growth, social progress, and the protection of regional peace and stability. Cultural development, another of the organizations aims, is limited to exchanges between the various cultures within the region. (Overview n.p.)However, members of the ASEAN are united through their shared colonial experience from European nations which greatly influenced the entire regions cultural identity. One of the devices that reinforced this hegemonic influence is mass media, which is an umbrella term for various communicative forms mainly (mostly Western in origin) associated with technology such as film and broadcast communication. Its Western provenance indicates that these forms carry Western ideologies, such as notions of beauty, familial ties, the cult of celebrity, and other values. FILMASEAN cinema is largely overshadowed by its East Asian and South Asian counterparts in the realm of Asian cinema, a subdivision of a concept called world cinema, a term which only refers to the industry that lies outside the scope of Western cinema (i.e. Hollywood) (Curran, v-vi). The notion of a regional cinematic identity relates to the aforementioned difficulty in establishing a specific character for the region due to its diversity, as some countries (such as Singapore) even find it difficult to define its national cinema. However, the emerging subversive force that is independent cinema is gaining traction within the region, as these cinemas aim to deviate from conventions as an assertion of their national identity. Filmmakers such as Lav Diaz and Brillante Mendoza from the Philippines raise the bar within their nations film industry by challenging the mainstream establishment that is Hollywood. (Nelepo, n.p.)ADVERTISINGIn the history of globalization and advertising in Thailand, the Philippines, Indonesia, Singapore, and Malaysia, its seen that the highest advertising expenditure from 1990 to 1998 was mostly given to TV and newspaper (Khattab and Ibrahim, 163-167).TV commercials are a way for corporations to communicate their products to consumers or their would-be customers. Every culture is a complex web of social relations, religious beliefs, languages and consumption attitudes and habits (Tse, Belk, & Zhou 1989). It is a basic principle in communications theory that, for any communication to be successful, the sender of the message must understand the frame of reference of the receiver of the message (Schramm 1954). (Khattab and Ibrahim, 169) Multinational corporations have dominated the advertising industry throughout the world, as in the case of Malaysia. Some of the top advertisers are Nestle, Procter & Gamble, McCann-Erickson (Khattab and Ibrahim, 168-169). Due to the diverse cultures of their target audience, multinational corporations take advantage of cultural differences to make their advertisements more familiar to each culture. Due to globalization, the need for multination corporations to communicate their products in a manner appropriate to certain cultures has lessened, as can be seen in several of the Pantene commercials aired across Southeast Asia. The Pantene commercials from the Philippines, Vietnam, Indonesia, and Malaysia all feature similar figures: beautiful, young, and famous women with long, dark, and silky hair. Even without English subtitles or understanding what the women are saying in the foreign commercials, one has the understanding that Pantene offers silky-smooth, healthy, damage-free hair, which will in turn make one beautiful and popular like the women in their commercial.But despite the globalization phenomenon, standardized advertising methods (especially those that stem from Western standards) have been given much criticism as the power of each cultures fine nuances should always be given consideration in advertising ones products to other countries (Khattab and Ibrahim, 170).

REFERENCES"Overview."Association of Southeast Asian Nations. N.p., 2012. Web. .Curran, Daniel. Foreign Films: More than 500 films on video cassette, pages v-vi. Evanston. Illinois: CineBooks. 1989.Khattab, Umi and Ibrahim, Farida, eds. Communication and Media Studies in ASEAN: Bridge to New Frontiers. Selangor, Malaysia: School of Media and Communication Studies, Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia, 2002. Print.Nelepo, Boris. "Cannes 2013: Norte, the End of History (Lav Diaz, Philippines)."Cinema Scope. N.p., 2013. Web. .4 | SOUTHEAST ASIAN MEDIA