The Routledge Handbook of Chinese Media is a prestigious reference work providing an overview of the study of Chinese media. The editors bring together an interdisciplinary perspective with contributions from an international team of renowned scholars on subjects such as television, journalism and the internet and social media. Locating Chinese media within a regional setting by focusing on 'Greater China', the People's Republic of China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Macau and overseas Chinese communities; the chapters highlight the convergence of media and platforms in the region and emphasise the multi-directional and trans-national character of media and information flows in East Asia.
Gary D. Rawnsley is a Professor of Public Diplomacy, Aberystwyth University, UK.
Ming-yeh T. Rawnsley is Research Associate, Centre of Taiwan Studies, School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, and Associate Fellow, China Policy Institute, University of Nottingham, UK.
Introduction Part 1: The Development and the Study of Chinese Media 1. China, Soft Power and Imperialism 2. Chasing a Moving Target: Directions of Chinese Media Research Part 2: Politics, Press Freedom and Culture 3. Evaluating Chinese Media Policy: Objectives and Contradictions 4. Key Moments in the History of the Modern Chinese Press 5. Setting Press Boundaries: The Case of the Nanfang Media Group 6. Chinese Investigative Journalism in the Twenty-First Century 7. Press Freedom in Hong Kong: Interactions between State, Media and Society 8. Politics and Social Media in China 9. The Formation of Working-Class Media Cultures in China: Workers and Peasants as Historical Subjects 10. The Politics and Poetics of Television Documentary in China 11. Contemporary Chinese Historical TV Drama as a Cultural Genre: Production, Consumption and the State Power Part 3: Public Sphere, the Internet and Social Activism 12. Against the Grain: The Battle for Public Service Broadcasting in Taiwan 13. Public Service Television in the PRC 14. An Emerging Middle Class Public Sphere in China? Analysis of News Media Representation of 'Self Tax Declaration' 15. 'Dear Premier, I Finally Escaped on YouTube': A Cyberconflict Perspective on Chinese Dissidents 16. Online Chinese Nationalism and Its Nationalist Discourses 17. Media and Social Mobilization in Hong Kong 18. Citizen Journalism in Taiwan: A Case Study of an Online Platform PeoPo 19. Expressing Myself, Connecting with You: Taiwanese Young Females' Photographic Self-Portraiture on Wretch Album Part 4: Market, Production and the Media Industries 20. The Geographical Clustering of Chinese Media Production 21. The Changing Role of Copyright in China's Emergent Media Economy 22. Gamers, State and Online Games 23. Live Television Production of Media Events in China: The Case of the Beijing Olympic Games 24. The Ambiguity of 'the Popular' and the Popular Press in China 25. Negotiated Discursive Struggles in Hyper-Oligopolistic Media System - the Case of Hong Kong Part 5: Chinese Media and the World 26. Internationalization of China's Television: History, Development and New Trends 27. Decoding the Chinese Media in Flux: American Correspondents as an Interpretive Community 28. Chinese International Broadcasting, Public Diplomacy and Soft Power