Research Archives (2000s)This is a featured page

Akhavan-Majid, R. & Ramaprasad, J. (2000). Framing Beijing: Dominant ideological influences on the American press coverage of the fourth UN conference on women and NGO forum. Gazette, 62, 45-59.

Akhavan-majid, R. (2004). Mass media reform in China: Toward a new analytical framework. Gazette, 66(6), 553-565

Bishop, P. (2000). Caught in the cross-fire: Tibet, media and promotional culture. Media, Culture & Society, 22, 645-664.

Burgh, H. D. (2000). Chinese journalism and the academy: The politics and pedagogy of the media. Journalism Studies, 1, 549-558.

Burleson, Brant R.; Liu, Meina; Liu, Yan; Mortenson, Steven T. (2006).Chinese Evaluations of Emotional Support Skills, Goals, and Behaviors: An Assessment of Gender-related Similarities and Differences .Communication Research, 33, 1, 38-63.

Cao, Q. (2000). Journalism as politics: Reporting Hong Kong's handover in the Chinese press. Journalism Studies, 1, 665-678.

Chan, B. (2005). Imagining the homeland: The internet and diasporic discourse of nationalism. Journal of Communication Inquiry, 29 (4), 336-368.

Chan, J. M. (2000). When capitalist and socialist television clash: The impact of Hong Kong TV on Guangzhou residents. In C. C. Lee (Ed.), Power, money, and media: Communication patterns and bureaucratic control in cultural China (pp. 245-270).

Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press. Chan, J. M.; Pan, Z.; & Lee, F. L. F. (2004). Professional aspirations and job satisfaction: Chinese journalists at a time of change in the media. Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, 81, 254-273.

Chan, K. (2000). Hong Kong children's understanding of television advertising. Journal of Marketing Communications, 6: 37-52.

Chan, K. (2001). Children's perceived truthfulness of television advertising and parental influence: A Hong Kong study. Advances in Consumer Research, 28, 207-212.

Chan, K. (2003). Materialism among Chinese children in Hong Kong. International Journal of Advertising and Marketing to Children, 4, 47-61.

Chan, K. & Cheng, H. (2002). One country, two systems: Cultural values reflected in Chinese and Hong Kong television commercials. Gazette, 64, 385-400.

Chan, K. & McNeal, J. (2002). Children's perceptions of television advertising in urban China. International Journal of Advertising & Marketing to Children, 3, 69-79.

Chan, K. & McNeal, J. (2003). Parental concern about television viewing and children's advertising in Mainland China. International Journal of Public Opinion Research, 15, 151-166.

Chan, K. & McNeal, J. (2003). Parent-child communications about consumption and advertising in China. Journal of Consumer Marketing, 20, 317-332.

Chan, K.; McNeal, J.; & Chan, F. (2002). Children's response to television advertising in China. International Journal of Advertising and Marketing to Children, 4, 43-53.

Chang, C. (2000). Political advertising in Taiwan and the US: A cross-cultural comparison of the 1996 presidential election campaigns. Asian Journal of Communication, 10, 1-17.

Chang, T. K. & Chen, Y. (2000). Constructing international spectacle on television: CCTV news and China's window on the world, 1992-1996. In A. Malek & A. P. Kavoori (Eds.), The global dynamics of news: Studies in international news coverage
and news agenda
(pp. 197-221). Stamford, CT: Ablex Publishing Corporation.

Chang, T. K., Lau, T. Y. & Hao, X. (2000). From the United States with news and more: International flow, television coverage and the world system. Gazette, 62, 505-522.

Chang, T. K. & Tai, Z. (2003). Freedom of the press in the eyes of the dragon: A matter of Chinese relativism and pragmatism. In K. Anokwa, C. A. Lin, & M. B. Salwen (Eds.), International communication: Concepts and cases (pp. 24-46). Belmont, CA: Wadsworth/Thomson Learning.

Chang, T. K., with Wang, J.& Chen, Y. (2002). China's window on the world: TV news, social knowledge and international spectacles. Cresskill, NJ: Hampton.

Chen, G. M. (2001). Towards transcultural understanding: A harmony theory of Chinese communication. In V. H. Milhouse, M. K. Asante, & P. O. Nwosu (Eds.), Transculture: Interdisciplinary perspectives on cross-cultural relations (pp. 55-70). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.

Chen, G. M., & Chen, V. (2002). An examination of PRC business negotiations. Communication Research Reports, 19, 399-408.

Chen, G. M., & Chung, J. (2002). Superiority and seniority: A case analysis of decision making in a Taiwanese religious group. Intercultural Communication Studies, 11, 41-56.

Chen, G. M., & Holt, R. (2002). Persuasion through the water metaphor in Dao De Jing. Intercultural Communication Studies, 11, 153-171.

Chen, G. M., & Ma, R. (Eds.). (2002). Chinese conflict management and resolution. Westport, CT: Ablex.

Chen, G. M., Ryan, K., & Chen, C. (2000). The determinants of conflict management among Chinese and Americans. Intercultural Communication Studies, 9, 163-175.

Chen, L. (2000). Connecting to the world economy: Issues confronting organizations in Chinese societies. Management Communication Quarterly, 14, 850-857.

Chen, L. (2002). Revolution and us: A cultural rendition of political movements in contemporary China. In X. Lu, W. Jia, & D. R, Heisey (Eds.), Chinese communication studies: Contexts and comparisons (pp. 17-31). NJ: Ablex.

Chen, P. (2004). Transnational cable channels in the Taiwanese market: A study of domestication through programming strategies. Gazette, 66 (2), 167-183.

Cheng, H. (2000). An armchair surfing of a new global news medium: The Web's coverage of Hong Kong's handover. Gazette, 62, 431-444.

Cheung, A. S. Y. (2002). One step forward two steps back: A study of press law in post-colonial Hong Kong. Journalism & Communication Monographs, 3, 191-226.

Chung, P. C. (2000). The cultural other and national identity in the Taiwanese and South Korean media. Gazette. 62, 99-115.

Chung, P. C. (forthcoming). Asian filmmakers moving into Hollywood: Genre regulation and suteur sesthetics. Asian Cinema.

Donald, S. H. (2000). Public secrets, public spaces: Cinema and civility in China. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.

Donald, S. H.; Keane, M.; & Yin, H. (Eds.). (2002). Media in China: Consumption and crisis. London: Routledge.

Elliott, C. W. (2000). Flows of news from the Middle Kingdom: An analysis of international news release from Xinhua. In A. Malek & A. P. Kavoori (Eds.), The global dynamics of news: Studies in international news coverage and news agenda (pp. 343-388). Stamford, CT: Ablex Publishing Corporation.

Erwin, K. (2000). Heart-to-heart, phone-to-phone: Family values, sexuality, and the politics of Shanghai's advice hotlines. In D. S. Davis (Ed.), The consumer revolution in urban China (pp. 145-170). Berkeley: University of California Press.

Franda. M. (2002). China and India online: Information technology, politics and diplomacy in the world's two largest nations. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.

Fraser, D. (2000). Inventing oasis: Luxury housing advertisements and reconfiguring domestic space in Shanghai. In D. S. Davis (Ed.), The consumer revolution in urban China (pp. 25-53). Berkeley: University of California Press.

Fung, A. Y. H. (2000). Problems and issues in new media education in Hong Kong. AsiaPacific MediaEducator, 8, 70-81.

Giles, R., Snyder, R. W., & DeLisle, L. (Eds.). (2001). Covering China. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers.

Guo, Z. (2000). Media use habits, audience expectations and media effects in Hong Kong's first legislative council election. Gazette, 62, 133-151.

Ha, L. & Pratt, C. B. (2000). Chinese and non-Chinese scholars' contributions to communication research on greater China, 1978-98. Asian Journal of Communication, 10, 95-113.

Hao, X. (2000). Party dominance vs. cultural imperialism: China's strategies to regulate satellite broadcasting. Communication Law and Policy, 5, 155-182.

Hao, X. & Chen, Y. (2000). Film and social change: The Chinese cinema in the reform era. Journal of Popular Film and Television, 28, 36-45.

He, Z. (2000). Working with a dying ideology: Dissonance and its reduction in Chinese journalism. Journalism Studies, 1, 599-616.

He, Z. (2000). Chinese Communist Party press in a tug-of-war: A political-economy analysis of the Shenzhen Special Zone Daily. In C. C. Lee (Ed.), Power, money, and media: Communication patterns and bureaucratic control in cultural China (pp.
112-151). Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press.

Heisey, D. R. (Ed.). (2000). Chinese perspectives in rhetoric and communication. JAI Press Inc.

Hong, Y. H. & Chang, R. (2002).. Who's on and why are they there?: A study of visitors to electoral candidates' websites in Taiwan. Asian Journal of Communication, 12, 30-49.

Hsieh, Y. C.; Hsieh, C. C.; & Lehman, J. A. (2003). Chinese ethics in communication, collaboration, and digitalization in the digital age. Journal of Mass Media Ethics, 18, 268-285.

Huang, C. (2000). The development of a semi-independent press in post-Mao China: An overview and a case study of Chengdu Business News. Journalism Studies, 1, 649-664.

Huang, C. (2001). China's state-run tabloids: The rise of 'city newspapers.' Gazette, 63, 435-450.

Huang, C. (2003). Transitional media vs. normative theories: Schramm, Altschull, and China. Journal of Communication, 53, 444-459.

Huang, L. N. & McAdams, K. C. (2000). Ideological manipulation via newspaper accounts of political conflict: A cross-national news analysis of the 1991 Moscow coup. In A. Malek & A. P. Kavoori (Eds.), The global dynamics of news: Studies in
international news coverage and news agenda
(pp. 57-73). Stamford, CT: Ablex Publishing Corporation.

Huang, Y. & Green, A. (2000). From Mao to the millennium: 40 years of television in China (1958-1998). In D. French & M. Richards (Eds.), Television in contemporary Asia (pp. 267-292). New Delhi: Sage.

Huang, Y. H. (2000). The personal influence of model and gao guanxi in Taiwan Chinese public relations. Public Relations Review, 26, 219-236.

Huang, Y. H. (2001). OPRA: A cross-cultural, multiple-item scale for measuring organization-public relationships. Journal of Public Relations Research, 13, 61-90.

Huang, Y. H. (2004). PRSA: Scale development for exploring the impetus of public relations strategies. Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, 81, 307-326.

Hughes, C. R. (2003). China and the Internet: A question of politics or management. China Quarterly, 175, 818-824.

Ji, M. F. & McNeal, J. U. (2001). How Chinese children's commercials differ from those of the United States: A content analysis. Journal of Advertising, 30, 79-92.

Jia, W. (2001). The remaking of the Chinese character and identity in the 21st century: The Chinese face practices. Westport, Connecticut: Ablex.

Jia, W., Lu, X., & Heisey, D. R. (Eds.). (2002). Chinese communication theory and research: Reflections, new frontiers and new directions. Westport, Conn.: Praeger.

Jones, A. F. (2001). Yellow music: media culture and colonial modernity in the Chinese jazz age.Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press.

Kim, S. T. (2000). Making a difference: U.S. press coverage of the Kwangju and Tiananmen pro-democracy movement. Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, 77, 22-36.

Laughlin, C. A. (2002). Chinese reportage: The aesthetics of historical experience. Durham: Duke University Press.

Lee, B. K. & Chen, L. (2000). Cultural communication competence and psychological adjustment: A study of Chinese immigrant children's cross-cultural adaptation in Canada. Communication Research, 27, 764-792.

Lee, C. C. (Ed.). (2000). Power, money, and media: Communication patterns and bureaucratic control in cultural China. Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press.

Lee, C. C. (2000). Chinese communication: Prisms, trajectories, and modes of understanding. In C. C. Lee (Ed.), Power, money, and media: Communication patterns and bureaucratic control in cultural China (pp. 1-44). Evanston, IL: Northwestern
University Press.

Lee, C. C. (2000). The paradox of political economy: Media structure, press freedom, and regime change in Hong Kong. In C. C. Lee (Ed.), Power, money, and media: Communication patterns and bureaucratic control in cultural China (pp. 288-336).
Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press.

Lee, C. C. (2000). State, capital, and media: The case of Taiwan. In J. Curran & M. J. Park (Eds.), De-Westernizing media studies (pp. 124-138). London: Routledge.

Lee, C. C. (2000). China's journalism: The emancipatory potential of social theory. Journalism Studies, 1, 559-575.

Lee, C. C. (2001). Servants of the state or the market?: Media and journalists in China. In J. Tunstall (Ed.), Media occupations and professions: A reader (pp. 240-252). Cambridge: Oxford University Press.

Lee, C. C. (2001). Rethinking political economy: Implications for media and democracy in greater China. The Public, 8, 81-102.

Lee, C. C. (Ed.). (2003). Chinese media, global contexts. London: RoutledgeCurzon.

Lee, C. C.; Chan, J. M.; Pan, Z.; & So, C. Y. K. (2000). National prisms of a global 'media event.' In J. Curran & M. Gurevitch (Eds.), Mass media and society, third edition (pp. 295-309). London: Arnold.

Lee, C. C.; Chan, J. M.; Pan, Z., & and So, C. Y. K. (2002). Global media spectacle: News war Over Hong Kong. Buffalo: New York State University Press.

Lee, C. C.; Pan, Z.; Chan, J. M.; & So, C. Y. K. (2001). Through the eyes of U.S. media: Banging the democracy drum in Hong Kong. Journal of Communication, 51, 345-365.

Lee, T. V. (2000). The media and the legal bureaucracy of the People's Republic of China. In C. C. Lee (Ed.), Power, money, and media: Communication patterns and bureaucratic control in cultural China (pp. 208-244). Evanston, IL: Northwestern
University Press.

Leung, L. & Wei, R. (2000). More than just talk on the move: Uses and gratifications on the cellular phone. Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, 77, 308-320.

Li, S. C. S. (2004). Exploring the factors influencing the adoption of interactive cable television services in Taiwan. Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media, 48, 466-483.

Li, S. C. S. & Chiang, C. C. (2001). Market competition and programming diversity: A study on the TV market in Taiwan. Journal of Media Economics, 14, 105-119.

Lin, C. A. (2001). Cultural values reflected in Chinese and American televison advertising. Journal of Advertising, 30, 83-94.

Liu, S., & Chen, G. M. (2000). Assessing Chinese conflict management styles in joint ventures. Intercultural Communication Studies, 9, 71-88.

Lo, S. H. (2001). Governing Hong Kong: Legitimacy, communication and political decay. New York: Nova Science Publishers.

Lo, V. H., Paddon, A., & Wu, H. (2000). Front pages of Taiwan daily newspapers 1952-1996: How ending martial law influenced publication design. Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, 77, 880-897.

Lo, V. H. & Wei, Ran. (2002). Third-person effect, gender, and pornography on the Internet (Taiwan). Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media, 46, 13-33.

Lu, X. (2004). Rhetoric of the Chinese Cultural Revolution: The impact on Chinese thought, culture, and communication. Columbia, SC: University of South Carolina Press.

Lu, X.; Jia, W.; & Heisey, D. R. (Eds.). (2002). Chinese communication studies: Contexts and comparisons. Westport, Conn: Praeger.

Lum, C. M. K. (2000). An intimate voice from afar: A brief history of New York's Chinese-language wireless radio. Journal of Radio Studies, 7, 355-372.

Lum, C. M. K. (2006). Communicating Chinese heritage in America: A study of bicultural education across generations. In Wendy Leeds-Hurwitz (Ed.), From generation to generation: Maintaining cultural identity over time (pp. 75-98). Cresskill, New Jersey: Hampton Press.

Lynch, D. C. (2000). The nature and consequences of China's unique pattern of telecommunications development. In C. C. Lee (Ed.), Power, money, and media: Communication patterns and bureaucratic control in cultural China (pp. 179-207). Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press.

Ma, E. K. (2000). Rethinking media studies: The case of China. In J. Curran & M. J. Park (Eds.), De-Westernizing media studies (pp. 21-34). London: Routledge.

McCormick, B. (2003). Recent trends in mainland China's media: Political implications of commercialization. Issues & Studies, 38-39, 175-215.

Melkote, S. R. & Liu, D. J. (2000). The role of the Internet in forging a pluralistic integration: A study of Chinese intellectuals in the United States. Gazette, 62, 495-504.

Mittler, B. (2004). A newspaper for China? Power, identity, and change in Shanghai's news media, 1872-1912. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

Moon, Y. S. & Chan, K. (2002). Gender portrayal in Hong Kong and Korean children's TV commercials: A cross-cultural comparison. Asian Journal of Communication, 12, 100-119.

Nadamitsu, Y., Chen, L. & Friedrich, G. (2000). Similar or different: A cross-cultural study of some aspects of Japanese and Chinese communication. Intercultural Communication Annual, Vol. 23 (pp. 158-188). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.

Pan, Z. (2000). Improvising reform activities: The changing reality of journalistic practice in China. In C. C. Lee (Ed.), Power, money, and media: Communication patterns and bureaucratic control in cultural China (pp. 68-111). Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press.

Pan, Z. & Chan, J. (2000). Building a market-based party organ: Television and national integration in China. In D. French & M. Richards (Eds.), Television in contemporary Asia (pp. 233-266). New Delhi: Sage.

Pan, Z., Lee, C. C., Chan, J. M., & So, C. Y. K. (2000). One event, three stories: Media narratives from cultural China of the handover of Hong Kong. In C. C. Lee (Ed.), Power, money, and media: Communication patterns and bureaucratic control in cultural China (pp. 271-287). Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press.

Pang, L. (2002). Building a new China in cinema: The Chinese left-wing cinema movement, 1932-1937. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.

Parsons, P. & Xu, X. (2001). News framing of the Chinese Embassy bombing. Asian Journal of Communication. 11, 51-67.

Pashupati, K.; Sun, H. L.; & McDowell, S. (2003). Guardians of culture, development communicators, or state capitalists? A comparative analysis of Indian and Chinese policy responses to broadcast, cable and satellite television. Gazette, 65, 251-271.

Polumbaum, J. (2001). China’s media: Between politics and the market. Current History, 100, no. 647, 269-277.

Rosen, S. (2000). Seeking appropriate behavior under a socialist market economy: An analysis of debates and controversies reported in the Beijing Youth Daily. In C. C. Lee (Ed.), Power, money, and media: Communication patterns and bureaucratic
control in cultural China
(pp. 152-178). Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press.

Sha, B. L. & Huang, Y. H. (2004). Public relations on Taiwan: Evolving with the infrastructure. In K. Sriramesh (Ed.), Public relations in Asia (pp. 161-185). Singapore: Thomson Asia.

Sun, T., Chang, T. K., & Yu, G. (2001). Social structure, media system, and audiences in China: Testing the uses and dependency model. Mass Communication & Society, 4, 199-217.

Sun, W. (2002). Leaving China: Media, migration, and transnational imagination. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.

Sun, X., Michel, E. C. (Ed.), & Easton, E. B. (Ed.). (2000). An orchestra of voices: Making the argument for greater speech and press freedom in the People's Republic of China. Westport, CT: Praeger.

Tai, Z. (2000). Media of the world and world of the media: A cross-national study of the rankings of the 'top 10 world events'
from 1988 to 1998. Gazette, 62, 331-353.

Tsai, Y. (2000). Cultural identity in an era of globalization: The structure and content of Taiwanese soap operas. In G. Wang, J. Servaes & A. Goonasekera (Eds.), The new communications landscape: Demystifying media globalization (pp. 174-187).
London: Routledge.

Tsao, J. C. & Chang, C. (2002). Communication strategy in Taiwanese and US corporate Web pages: A cross-cultural comparison. Asian Journal of Communication, 12, 1-30.

Wang, C. L. & Chan, A. K. K. (2001). A content analysis of connectedness vs. separateness themes used in US and PRC print advertisements. International Marketing Review, 18, 145-159.

Wang, J. (2000). Foreign advertising in China: Becoming global, becoming local. Ames, IA: Iowa State University Press.

Wang, J. (2000). Export of culture or coproduction of culture? Vignettes from the creative process at a global advertising affiliate, Beijing. In G. Wang, J. Servaes & A. Goonasekera (Eds.), The new communications landscape: Demystifying media
globalization
(pp. 160-173). London: Routledge.

Wang, S. (2003). Framing piracy: Globalization and film distribution in Greater China. Boulder, Colorado: Rowman & Littlefield.

Wang, T. L. (2002). Whose 'interactive' channel?: Exploring the concept of interactivity defined in Taiwan's 2000 presidential election online campaigns. Asian Journal of Communication, 12, 50-78.

Weber, I. (2003). Localizing the global: Successful strategies for selling television programmes to China. Gazette, 65, 273-290.

Wei, R. (2000). Mainland Chinese news in Taiwan's press: The interplay of press ideology, organizational strategies and news structure. In C. C. Lee (Ed.), Power, money, and media: Communication patterns and bureaucratic control in cultural China (pp. 337-365). Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press.

Wei, R. (2001). From luxury to utility: A longitudinal analysis of cell phone laggards. Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, 78, 702-719.

Weston, T. B. & Jensen, L. M. (Eds.). (2000). China beyond the headlines. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.

Winfield, B. H. & Peng, Z. (2005). Market or party controls? : Chinese media in transition. Gazette, 67(3), 255-270 Wong, W. S. (2000). The rise of consumer culture in a Chinese society: A reading of banking television commercials in Hong
Kong during the 1970s. Mass Communication & Society, 3, 393-413.

Wu, G. (2000). One head, many mouths: Diversifying press structures in reform China. In C. C. Lee (Ed.), Power, money, and media: Communication patterns and bureaucratic control in cultural China (pp. 45-67). Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press.

Wu, G., La Ferle, C., & Lee, W. (2000). Advertising education in China: What do the professionals think? International Journal of Advertising, 19, 95-116.

Wu, W. (2000). Motives of Chinese students to choose journalism careers. Journalism & Mass Communication Educator, 55, 53-65.

Xu, H. (2000). Morality discourse in the marketplace: Narratives in the Chinese television news magazine Oriental Horizon. Journalism Studies, 1, 637-647.

Yang, C. & Southwell, B.G. (2004). Dangerous disease, dangerous women: Health, anxiety, and advertising in Shanghai from 1928-1937. Critical Public Health, 14, 149-156.

Yang, C.; Wu, H.; Zhu, M.; & Southwell, B.G. (2004). Tuning in to fit in? Acculturation and media use among Chinese students in the United States. Asian Journal of Communication, 14, 81-94.

Yang, J. (2003). Framing the NATO air strikes on Kosovo across countries: Comparison of Chinese and US newspaper coverage. Gazette, 65, 231-249.

Yu, H. (2001). Publishing education of China faces the challenge of development. Publishing Research Quarterly, 16, 28-40.

Zhang, Y. (2000). From masses to audience: Changing media ideologies and practices in reform China. Journalism Studies, 1, 617-635.

Zhang, Y. B. & Harwood, J. (2002). Television viewing and perceptions of traditional Chinese values among Chinese college students. Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media, 46, 245-264.

Zhang, Y. B. & Harwood, J. (2004). Modernization and tradition in an age of globalization: Cultural values in Chinese television commercials. Journal of Communication, 54, 156-172.

Zhao, Y. (2000). Caught in the Web: The public interest and the battle for control of China's information superhighway, Info, 2, 41-66.

Zhao, Y. (2000). From commercialization to conglomeration: The transformation of the Chinese press within the orbit of the party state. Journal of Communication, 50, 3-26.

Zhao, Y. (2001). Herbert Schiller, the US media, and democracy in China. Journal of Television and New Media, 2, 51-55.

Zhao, Y. (2001). Media and elusive democracy in China. The Public/Javnost: Journal of the European Institute for Communication and Culture, 8, 21-44.

Zhao, Y. (2002). The Rich, the laid-off, and the criminal in tabloid tales: Read all about it!. In Perry Link, Richard Madsen, & Paul Pickowicz (Eds.), Popular China: Unofficial Culture in a Globalizing Society (pp. 111-135). New York: Rowman and Littlefield.

Zhao, Y. (2003). Transnational capital, the Chinese state, and China's communication industries in a fractured society. The Public/Javnost: Journal of the European Institute for Communication and Culture, 10, 53-74.

Zhao, Y. (2003). Underdogs, lapdogs, and watchdogs: Journalists and the public sphere problematic in China. In Gu Xin and Merle Goldman (Eds.), Chinese Intellectuals between the State and the Market (pp. 43-74). London: RoutledgeCurzon.

Zhao, Y. (2003). Falun Gong, identity, and the struggle over meaning inside and outside China. In Nick Couldry and James Curran (Eds.), Contesting Media Power: Alternative Media in a Networked Society (pp. 209-224). Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield.

Zhao, Y. (2003). Transnational capital and market tensions in Chinese communications. Media Development, 3, 8-11.

Zhao, Y. & Schiller, D. (2001). Dances with wolves? China's integration into digital capitalism. Info, 3, 137-151.

Zhao, Y. (2004). Between a world summit and a Chinese movie: visions of the ¡®Information Society. Gazette, 66 (3-4), 275-280 Zhong, Y. (2004). CCTV 'dialogue' = speaking + listening: A case analysis of a pretigious CCTV talk show series Dialogue.
Media, Culture & Society, 26: 821-840.

Zhou, N. & Belk, R. W. (2004). Chinese consumer readings of global and local advertising appeals. Journal of Advertising, 33, 63-76.

Zhou (sic), Y. (2000). Watchdogs on party leashes? Contexts and implications of investigative journalism in post-Deng China. Journalism Studies, 1, 577-597.

Zhu, J. J. H. & He, Z. (2002). Perceived characteristics, perceived needs, and perceived popularity: Adoption and use of the Internet in China. Communication Research, 20, 466-495.

Zhu, J. J. H. & Ke, H. (2001). Political culture as social construction of reality: A case study of Hong Kong's images in mainland China. In Shiping Hua (Ed.), Chinese political culture, 1989-2000 (pp. 188-215). Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe.

Zhu, Y. (2000). From new wave to post new wave: Chinese fifth generation's cinematic transition. Asian Culture Quarterly, 28, 13-48.

Zhu, Y. (2001). Cinematic modernization and Chinese cinema's first art wave. Quarterly Review of Film & Video, 18, 451-471.

Zhu, Y. (2002). Chinese cinema's economic reform from the mid 1980s to the mid 1990s. Journal of Communication, 52, 905-921.

Zhu, Y. (2002). Commercialization and Chinese cinema's post-wave. Consumption, Markets & Culture, 5, 187-209.

Zhu, Y. (2003). Chinese cinema during the era of reform: The ingenuity of the system. Westport, CT: Praeger.

© 2006 Chinese Communication Associatiion All rights reserved


No user avatar
webcom
Latest page update: made by webcom , Sep 26 2006, 5:56 PM EDT (about this update About This Update webcom Edited by webcom

5 words added
6 words deleted

view changes

- complete history)
Keyword tags: None
More Info: links to this page

Anonymous  (Get credit for your thread)


There are no threads for this page.  Be the first to start a new thread.