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Communicating with the World: Interaction between Chinese and International Media
Barnes and Noble
Communicating with the World: Interaction between Chinese and International Media
Current price: $170.00


Barnes and Noble
Communicating with the World: Interaction between Chinese and International Media
Current price: $170.00
Size: Hardcover
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This book analyses the creation and dissemination of discourse in China while examining how its media and the people interact and communicate with the rest of the world. It explores the interplay between language, meanings, social practices, culture and politics in the processes of discourse generation.
The book critically studies intercultural communication and Chinese discourse models at the national, institutional and individual levels and the different modes of interaction between China and the world. With the help of several case studies the book analyses reports from the
People’s Daily
, interpersonal meaning in promotional videos and advertisements in China, rhetoric in the editorials of
China Daily
and the representation by international media like
The Associated Press
and
The
New York Times
to explore differences between Chinese and the Western media reporting the same event. It also looks at the complex models through which the Chinese people—both as individuals and as a collective—communicate with and gain an understanding of the rest of the world.
Rich in empirical case studies, this book will be an essential read for scholars and researchers of Chinese Studies, communication studies, media and cultural studies, international relations and political communication.
The book critically studies intercultural communication and Chinese discourse models at the national, institutional and individual levels and the different modes of interaction between China and the world. With the help of several case studies the book analyses reports from the
People’s Daily
, interpersonal meaning in promotional videos and advertisements in China, rhetoric in the editorials of
China Daily
and the representation by international media like
The Associated Press
and
The
New York Times
to explore differences between Chinese and the Western media reporting the same event. It also looks at the complex models through which the Chinese people—both as individuals and as a collective—communicate with and gain an understanding of the rest of the world.
Rich in empirical case studies, this book will be an essential read for scholars and researchers of Chinese Studies, communication studies, media and cultural studies, international relations and political communication.