Welcome to my Website

I am a Media Studies Professor based at Willamette University in Salem, the picturesque capital of Oregon.

This site provides an overview of my publications and current research as well as teaching activities and contributions to college education.  Please enjoy the site.

Dr. Huike Wen

Dr. Huike Wen

This book is about how the representations of romantic love in television reflect the change and the dilemma of the dominant values in post-socialist Chinese mainstream culture. These values mainly center on the impact of individualism, consumerism, capitalism, and neoliberalism, often referred to as western culture, on the perception of romantic love and self-realization in China.

The book focuses on how romantic love, which plays a vital role in China’s ideologically highly restricted social environment by empowering people with individual choice, change, and social mobility, must struggle and compromise with the reality, specifically the values and problems emerging in a transitional China. The book also examines how the representation of romantic love celebrates ideals―individual freedom, passion, and gender equality―and promises changes based on individual diligence and talent while simultaneously obstructing the fulfillment of these ideals. 

Hui Faye Xiao
Hui Faye XiaoUniversity of Kansas, USA
Surveying the latest Chinese TV shows centered on romantic relationships, this book joins the expanding body of literature on the ever-evolving structures of feelings while breaking new grounds in media studies. With its thorough investigation of a wide range of genres, narratives, and public discourses, the volume makes timely and significant contributions to the fields of media studies, China studies, and the cultural history of love and romance.
Hsu-Ming Teo
Hsu-Ming TeoMacquarie University, Australia
What does romantic love mean for Chinese people today? How is love represented in popular Chinese television programs? Huike Wen’s fascinating and important book explores how romantic love promises young Chinese urbanites individual freedom, fulfillment, and purpose in life, yet also plays an ideological role in creating social cohesion and maintaining traditional patriarchal values in post-socialist China. An entertaining and thought-provoking insight into how love functions in contemporary Chinese society.
Dazzling The Eyes by Huike Wen

Television and the Modernization Ideal in 1980s China: Dazzling the Eyes explores Chinese television history in the pivotal decade of the 1980s and explains the intellectual reception of television in China during this time. While the Chinese media has often been a topic within studies of globalization and the global political economy, scholarly attention to the history of Chinese television requires a more extensive and critical view of the interaction between television and culture. Using theories of media technology, globalization, and gender studies supplemented by Chinese periodicals including Life Out of 8 Hours, Popular TV, Popular Cinema, Modern Family, and Chinese Advertising, as well as oral history interviews, this book re-examines how Western technology was introduced to and embedded into Chinese culture. Wen compares and analyzes television dramas produced in China and imported from other nations while examining the interaction between various ideologies of Chinese society and those of the international media. Moreover, she explores how the hybridity between Western television culture and Chinese traditions were represented in popular Chinese visual media, specifically the confusions and ambitions of modernization and the negotiation between tradition and modernity, nationalism and internationalism, in the intellectual reception of television in China.

Michael Curtin; author of Playing to the World’s Biggest Audience
Michael Curtin; author of Playing to the World’s Biggest AudienceMellichamp Professor
During the 1980s, China embraced TV technology more quickly and enthusiastically than any other society. It’s a story often told, but little understood, until now. Huike Wen shows how television played a pivotal role in the social and cultural transformations that took place during Deng Xiaoping’s decade of the four modernizations. Inspired by Lynn Spigel, Wen recovers the texture of the times to vividly explain how China ‘made room for TV.’
Junhao Hong
Junhao HongCommunication Professor of State University of New York at Buffalo and Associate in Research of Harvard University
An interesting, enlightening, and thoughtful book on changes in China’s TV programming as a mirror of the modern transformation and unprecedented evolution of the milliard people’s society!