ABSTRACT
As part of its ‘going out’ strategy, China is using the media to promote its views and vision to the wider world and to counter negative images in the US-dominated international media. China’s Media Go Global, the first edited collection on this subject, evaluates how the unprecedented expansion of Chinese media and communications is changing the global media landscape and the role of China within it.
Each chapter examines a different dimension of Chinese media’s globalization, from newspapers, radio, film and television, to social media and journalism. Topics include the rise of Chinese news networks, China Daily as an instrument of China’s public diplomacy and the discussion around the growth of China’s state media in Africa. Other chapters discuss entertainment television, financial media and the advertising market in China.
Together, this collection of essays offers a comprehensive evaluation of complex debates concerning the impact of China on the international media landscape, and makes a distinctive addition to Chinese media studies, as well as to broader global media discourses. Beyond its primary readership among academics and students, China’s Media Go Global is aimed at the growing constituency of general readers, for whom the role of the media in globalization is of wider interest.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|86 pages
Conceptualizing the rise of China’s media
chapter 5|22 pages
Soft power and the strategic context for China’s ‘media going global’ policy
part II|82 pages
Chinese media abroad
chapter 6|19 pages
Tiangao or tianxia?: the ambiguities of CCTV’s English-language news for Africa
part III|74 pages
Discourses of Sino-globalization
chapter 12|14 pages
Foreign correspondents in China: partner or liability in China’s public diplomacy?
chapter 14|17 pages
The rise of China’s financial media: globalizing economy vs. globalizing economic discourse
part IV|56 pages
Media with Chinese characteristics