Media, Market, and Democracy in China: Between the Party Line and the Bottom Line

封面
University of Illinois Press, 1998 - 255 頁
Media, Market, and Democracy in China is an astonishingly close look at the intertwining nature of the Communist Party and the news media in China, how they affect each other, and what the future might hold for each.
How do market forces influence the media in China? How does the Party both introduce and try to contain the market's influence? How do commercial imperatives both accommodate and challenge Party control?
To answer these and other questions, Yuezhi Zhao interviewed a wide range of scholars, media administrators, and media professionals. During five months in China in 1994 and 1995, she monitored media content, carried out extensive documentary research in Beijing, and held off-the-record meetings with Chinese media insiders.
The first study of its kind to trace the Chinese print and broadcast media from the 1920s to 1996, this work will be must reading for students of journalism, mass communications, political science, and China studies, as well as for media and business professionals and policy makers who need to understand what's happening to China and its mass media.


 

內容

Party Journalism in China Theory and Practice
14
The Trajectory of Media Reform
34
Media Commercialization with Chinese Characteristics
52
Corruption The Journalism of Decadence
72
Broadcasting Reform amidst Commercialization
94
Newspapers for the Market
127
Toward a PropagandistCommercial Model of Journalism?
151
Challenges and Responses
165
Media Reform beyond Commercialization
181
Notes
195
Selected Bibliography
235
Index
245
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常見字詞

關於作者 (1998)

Yuezhi Zhao is a professor in the School of Communications at Simon Fraser University. Her books include Communication in China: Political Economy, Power, and Conflict.

書目資訊