It comes weeks after President Xi Jinping told a group of artists not to chase popularity with "vulgar" works but promote socialism instead, with state media comparing his remarks to a speech by Mao.
Chinese Internet users reacted to the latest news with derision on Tuesday, with some calling the decision the beginning of a "new Cultural Revolution".
The State Administration of Press, Publication, Radio, Film and Television (SAPPRFT) announced that it "will organise film and TV series production staff on a quarterly basis to go to grassroots communities, villages and mining sites to do field study and experience life".
Scriptwriters, directors, broadcasters and anchors will also be sent to work and live for at least 30 days "in ethnic minority and border areas, and areas that made major contributions to the country's victory in the revolutionary war", the notice said.
The move "will be a boost in helping artists form a correct view of art and create more masterpieces", it added in the notice, published Monday.
Beijing imposes tight controls over culture, and ideological restrictions have tightened under Xi, with authorities censoring Ai Weiwei and other artists they perceive as challenging its right to rule.
Joseph Cheng, professor of political science at the City University of Hong Kong, described the move as a Mao-style "rectification campaign" aimed at silencing potential critics as Xi leads a far-reaching anti-graft sweep.
"Xi Jinping is under considerable pressure, because his anti-corruption campaign certainly has hurt a lot of vested interests," Cheng said. "This is again a time of pressure tactics on the intelligentsia and on the critics."
- 'Slaves to the market' -
The new edict harkens back to the era of Communist China's founder, when popular art was little more than propaganda, but Cheng said that whereas Mao's Cultural Revolution was aimed at the entire intelligentsia, the current move was more targeted.
"This campaign is a bit different in the sense that as long as you don't challenge the authorities -- as long as you keep quiet -- you are safe to keep making money," he said.
In October, Xi told a group of artists that they should not become "slaves to the market". The state-run China Daily likened his remarks to a well-known speech by Mao in the 1940s which outlined his view that the arts should serve politics.
"Art and culture cannot develop without political guidance," the paper said, congratulating Xi for "emphasising the integration of ideology and artistic values".
Some internet users posting on Sina Weibo, a Chinese version of Twitter, voiced worry about the SAPPRFT announcement.
"Is this a new Cultural Revolution?" wrote one. "Even the media watchdog is beginning to be rectified."
Another said: "I want to know who organised Lu Xun, Lao She and Mo Yan to go to grassroots communities," referring to three of China's most revered writers, the last of whom won the 2012 Nobel Literature Prize.
Others responded with amusement.
"Isn't this what Hunan TV has been doing all along?" wrote one Sina Weibo user, a reference to a provincial TV station that airs a popular reality show featuring celebrity fathers roughing it in rural areas with their children.
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Chinese Internet users reacted to the latest news with derision on Tuesday, with some calling the decision the beginning of a "new Cultural Revolution".
The State Administration of Press, Publication, Radio, Film and Television (SAPPRFT) announced that it "will organise film and TV series production staff on a quarterly basis to go to grassroots communities, villages and mining sites to do field study and experience life".
Scriptwriters, directors, broadcasters and anchors will also be sent to work and live for at least 30 days "in ethnic minority and border areas, and areas that made major contributions to the country's victory in the revolutionary war", the notice said.
The move "will be a boost in helping artists form a correct view of art and create more masterpieces", it added in the notice, published Monday.
Beijing imposes tight controls over culture, and ideological restrictions have tightened under Xi, with authorities censoring Ai Weiwei and other artists they perceive as challenging its right to rule.
Joseph Cheng, professor of political science at the City University of Hong Kong, described the move as a Mao-style "rectification campaign" aimed at silencing potential critics as Xi leads a far-reaching anti-graft sweep.
"Xi Jinping is under considerable pressure, because his anti-corruption campaign certainly has hurt a lot of vested interests," Cheng said. "This is again a time of pressure tactics on the intelligentsia and on the critics."
- 'Slaves to the market' -
The new edict harkens back to the era of Communist China's founder, when popular art was little more than propaganda, but Cheng said that whereas Mao's Cultural Revolution was aimed at the entire intelligentsia, the current move was more targeted.
"This campaign is a bit different in the sense that as long as you don't challenge the authorities -- as long as you keep quiet -- you are safe to keep making money," he said.
In October, Xi told a group of artists that they should not become "slaves to the market". The state-run China Daily likened his remarks to a well-known speech by Mao in the 1940s which outlined his view that the arts should serve politics.
"Art and culture cannot develop without political guidance," the paper said, congratulating Xi for "emphasising the integration of ideology and artistic values".
Some internet users posting on Sina Weibo, a Chinese version of Twitter, voiced worry about the SAPPRFT announcement.
"Is this a new Cultural Revolution?" wrote one. "Even the media watchdog is beginning to be rectified."
Another said: "I want to know who organised Lu Xun, Lao She and Mo Yan to go to grassroots communities," referring to three of China's most revered writers, the last of whom won the 2012 Nobel Literature Prize.
Others responded with amusement.
"Isn't this what Hunan TV has been doing all along?" wrote one Sina Weibo user, a reference to a provincial TV station that airs a popular reality show featuring celebrity fathers roughing it in rural areas with their children.
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