Global Media and Public Diplomacy in Sino-Western Relations
Many researchers and China observers would agree that understanding how China pursues global communication is critical for assessing its growing soft power. While soft power as a concept has, in many ways, become almost inextricably linked with the PRCs (Peoples Republic of China) international diplomacy of the twenty-first century, the specific role of global media within soft power diplomacy and the corresponding influence of Western mediated public diplomacy within China is a lacuna that has remained largely unexplored. Moreover, the different Chinese and Western perspectives on the influence of global media and public diplomacy on Sino-Western relations, and the changing role of global media on this crucial aspect of international politics, have not yet been critically examined.
This volume presents a broad social science audience with recent innovative scholarship and research findings on global media and public diplomacy concerning Sino-Western relations. It focuses on the implicit nexus between global media and public diplomacy, and their actual utilisation in and impact on the shifting relationships between China and the West. Special attention is given to the changing nature of globalised media in both China and Western nations, and how globalised media is influencing, shaping and changing international politics. The contributions delve deeply into both theory and practice, and focus especially upon the analysis of several key aspects of the issue from both Chinese and Western perspectives.
This combination of approaches distinguishes the volume from most other published works on the topic, and greatly enriches our knowledge base in this important contemporary field.
Jia Gao is Associate Professor of the Asia Institute, and concurrently Assistant Dean (China) at the Faculty of Arts, University of Melbourne, Australia.
Catherine Ingram is a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Sydney, Australia.
Pookong Kee is Professor and Director of the Asia Institute at the University of Melbourne, Australia.
Rethinking Asia and International Relations
Series Editor Emilian Kavalski, Australian Catholic University (Sydney)
For a full list of titles in this series, please visit www.routledge.com
This series seeks to provide thoughtful consideration both of the growing prominence of Asian actors on the global stage and the changes in the study and practice of world affairs that they provoke. It intends to offer a comprehensive parallel assessment of the full spectrum of Asian states, organisations, and regions and their impact on the dynamics of global politics.
The series seeks to encourage conversation on:
- what rules, norms, and strategic cultures are likely to dominate international life in the Asian Century;
- how will global problems be reframed and addressed by a rising Asia;
- which institutions, actors, and states are likely to provide leadership during such shifts to the East;
- whether there is something distinctly Asian about the emerging patterns of global politics.
Such comprehensive engagement not only aims to offer a critical assessment of the actual and prospective roles of Asian actors, but also seeks to rethink the concepts, practices, and frameworks of analysis of world politics.
This series invites proposals for interdisciplinary research monographs undertaking comparative studies of Asian actors and their impact on the current patterns and likely future trajectories of international relations. Furthermore, it offers a platform for pioneering explorations of the ongoing transformations in global politics as a result of Asias increasing centrality to the patterns and practices of world affairs.
Most recent titles
4.Risk State: Japans Foreign Policy in an Age of Uncertainty
Sebastian Maslow, Ra Mason and Paul OShea
5.Global Media and Public Diplomacy in Sino-Western Relations
Jia Gao, Catherine Ingram and Pookong Kee
Global Media and Public Diplomacy in Sino-Western Relations
Edited by Jia Gao, Catherine Ingram
and Pookong Kee
First published 2017
by Routledge
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2017 Selection and editorial matter: Jia Gao, Catherine Ingram and Pookong Kee; individual chapters: the contributors
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British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Gao, Jia, editor. | Ingram, Catherine (Ethnomusicologist), editor. |
Kee, Pookong, editor.
Title: Global media and public diplomacy in Sino-Western relations /
edited by Jia Gao, Catherine Ingram and Pookong Kee.
Description: Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2017. |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Identifiers: LCCN 2016005151 | ISBN 9781472443984 |
ISBN 9781315584904 (ebook)
Subjects: LCSH: ChinaForeign relations21st century. | China
Foreign relationsWestern countries. | Western countriesForeign
relationsChina. | Mass mediaPolitical aspectsChina.
Classification: LCC JZ1734 .G58 2017 | DDC 327.510182/1dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2016005151
ISBN: 978-1-4724-4398-4 (hbk)
ISBN: 978-1-315-58490-4 (ebk)
Typeset in Times New Roman
by Apex CoVantage, LLC
Contents
JIA GAO, CATHERINE INGRAM AND POOKONG KEE
GARY D. RAWNSLEY
JUYAN ZHANG
SOW KEAT TOK AND TIANRU GUAN
CLAIRE SEUNGEUN LEE
SHIXIN IVY ZHANG
PETER CAI
YI WANG
CHENGJU HUANG
SHUGE WEI
JIANGUO DENG AND SHAODE QIN
Peter Cai has degrees from both the University of Oxford and the University of Adelaide. As a policy officer at the Treasury Department in Canberra, he worked on foreign investment and trade policy, and from 2011 worked as a journalist for The Age and the Sydney Morning Herald covering Asian affairs and telecommunication. He has published academic articles and chapters on modern Chinese and Japanese history, international economics and public policy. Currently he is the editor of the China Spectator, which is published by Australian Independent Business Media (AIBM) Pty Ltd, a wholly owned subsidiary of News Ltd.
Jianguo Deng