Full Description
This book focuses on China's media diplomacy and its interplay with a range of international conflicts. It assesses the representation and framing of China, as well as the perception and reception of China's media communication in relation to various crises and conflicts. Including detailed analyses of many cases, it highlights the complex, fluid and dynamic relationship between media and conflict, and discusses how this both exemplifies and also affects China's relations with the outside world. In addition, in contrast to most existing studies of mediatized conflict in the digital age, it provides a very valuable non-Western perspective.
Contents
Studying media-conflict relationship through the lens of China
 
 
Strategy-framing of International Conflicts: A Multi-dimensional Framework for Transnational Comparative Content Analysis
 
 
Media type and framing of the Sino-US Trade War
An analysis of articles from party and nonparty news organizations in China
 
 
Soft Power Clashes? China in Platform Geopolitics: Global Aspirations and Political Struggles
 
 
Competing narratives of the Uyghur-Han conflicts and China-West geopolitical rivalries
 
 
The politics of remembering: commemorating the War to Resist US Aggression and Aid Korea in an era of China-US rivalry
 
 
The Domain of the State: Interpreting the 2012 Senkaku/Diaoyu Islands Disputes at Liberal
oriented Chinese Commercial Newspapers
 
 
How is NATO viewed in China? 
NATO's strategic communication and perceptions of Zhihu users
 
 
Indian media's China dilemma 
Sino-India 2020 face-off through the lens of Indian press: Analysis of editorials 
 
 
China's Overlooked Role in the Syrian Crisis
 
 
Mediatized Representation: Palestinian Online News Framing of China's Positions on the Question of Palestine (2020-2021)
 
 
Reimagining western media portrayals of China: U.S. and Ghanaian coverage of China's Covid-19 response

              
              
              

