Beer in East Asia : A Political Economy 1st Edition Paul Chambers – Ebook Instant Download/Delivery ISBN(s): 9781032253275,9781000852721,9781000852752,9781003282730,1032253274,1000852725,100085275X,1003282733
Product details:
- ISBN 10:100085275X
- ISBN 13:9781000852752
- Author: Paul Chambers
Beer in East Asia
A Political Economy
Table contents:
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
List of figures
List of tables
Contributors Bios
Introduction
1 Conceptualizing the Political-Economic History of Beer in East Asia
1.1 Introduction
1.2 Literature Review
1.3 Historical Institutionalism and Beer
1.4 Chapter Criteria
1.5 Organization of This Book
2 The Political Economy of the Japanese Beer Industry ‘Plus ça change…’
2.1 Introduction
2.2 The Pre-formative Period (1870–1901)
2.3 The Formative Period (1901–1945)
2.4 The Re-formative Period (1945–1989)
2.5 The Glocalization Period (1989–present)
2.6 Conclusion
3 Long March: The Historical Transformation of Chinese Beer
3.1 Introduction
3.2 Beer in Ancient China
3.3 Earliest True Beer—Harbin Beer
3.4 Another Early Traditional Brew—Tsingtao Beer
3.5 Cold War and Ideological Factors in Beer— The Story of “Bear Beer”
3.6 1980s to the 2000s: From the Socialist Marketing Economy to the Romance of the Three Beer Kingdoms
3.7 Polarized Beer Market: Chinese Craft and Fabricating Brands from North Korea
3.8 Conclusion
4 The Spread of Beer Culture(s) on the Korean Peninsula
4.1 Introduction
4.2 Nationalism, Path Dependency, and Boring Beer?
4.3 Historical-Cultural Legacies, Internationalized Identities, and Changing Flavors
4.4 Crafting the Future?
4.5 Conclusion
5 The Political Economy of Beer in Taiwan: From Japanese Pride to National Brouhaha, Beer Wars and Craft Beer
5.1 Introduction
5.2 Japanese Colonialism
5.3 Kuomintang Rule
5.4 Democratic Era
5.5 Conclusion
6 State-Market Dynamics and the Historical Dominance of San Miguel in the Philippine Beer Industry
6.1 Introduction
6.2 Historical Institutionalism and State-Market Dynamics
6.3 The Philippine Beer Industry
6.4 Early History of Beer in the Philippines
6.5 Protectionism, Competition, and World War II
6.6 Monopoly, Competition, and the Battle for San Miguel
6.7 Philippine Beer and Globalization
6.8 Conclusion
7 From Bière to Bia: The Political Economy of the Vietnamese Beer Industry
7.1 Introduction
7.2 Beer’s Birth: A Colonial Endeavor
7.3 From Bombs to Bia: Hanoi Reclaims Beer as Its Own
7.4 Doi Moi: Beer Wars and Equitization
7.5 The State Strikes Back
7.6 Conclusion
8 “Happiness You Can Drink:” The Evolution of Beer in Thailand
8.1 Introduction
8.2 Early Period: Civilization You Can Drink!
8.3 Monopoly and Oligopoly: Thai Beer (1933–2022)
8.4 Democratizing “Happiness”? Obstacles in the Beer Market, Craft Beer Revolution, and Political Protests
8.5 Conclusion
9 “Love Me, Love My Beer: National Heritage in a Bottle” The Social and Economic Engineering of the Lao Beer Industry
9.1 Kissana’s and Sivilay’s Revolutions
9.2 Undercutting the Opposition
9.3 Monopolizing Logistics
9.4 Carlsberg Infiltrates the LBC
9.5 Tiger Changing Stripes
9.6 Regional Rival
9.7 Heineken Arrives with a Bang
9.8 Going Global
9.9 LBC’s Newer Brands
9.10 Craft Beer Arrives
9.11 Responding to Craft’s Arrival
9.12 Law with Partial Implementation
9.13 Inaugural LBC Congress
9.14 Conclusion
10 Choul Mouy! The Political Economy of Beer in Cambodia
10.1 Introduction
10.2 Beer in Cambodia (until 1992)
10.3 Dominant Beer in Cambodia (1992–2021)
10.4 Craft Beer in Cambodia
10.5 Conclusion
11 The Political Economy of Beer in Myanmar: Smugglers, Boycotts, and a Bad Hangover
11.1 Introduction
11.2 Colonial Rule, Independence and Socialism
11.3 Military Rule
11.4 Liberalisation
11.5 Post-coup Chaos
11.6 Conclusion
Index
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