School of Journalism and Communication, CUHK - Critical/Cultural Studies
 

Critical/Cultural Studies

  1. Liao, Sara Xueting (2016). Precarious beauty: migrant Chinese women, beauty work, and precarity. Chinese Journal of Communication, 9(2), 139-152.

  2. Xin, Jing, & Matheson, Donald (2015). The Chinese writer as empty signifier: a corpus-based analysis of the English-language reporting of the 2012 Nobel Prize in Literature. Chinese Journal of Communication, 8(3), 289-305.

  3. Yang, Michelle Murray (2014). Guilty without trial: state-sponsored cheating and the 2008 Beijing Olympic women’s gymnastics competition. Chinese Journal of Communication, 7(1), 80-105.

  4. Deng, Yiheng (2012). Strategy to alleviate adversity in Chinese mediation: a discourse analysis on real Chinese mediation sessions. Chinese Journal of Communication, 5(4), 417-436.

  5. Lu, Ye & Chu, Yajie (2012). Media use, social cohesion, and cultural citizenship: an analysis of a Chinese metropolis. Chinese Journal of Communication, 5(4), 365-382.

  6. Zhang, Xiaoling & Guo, Zhenzhi (2012). Hegemony and counter-hegemony: the politics of dialects in TV programs in China. Chinese Journal of Communication, 5(3), 300-315.

  7. Sparks, Colin (2012). Media and cultural imperialism reconsidered. Chinese Journal of Communication, 5(3), 281-299.

  8. Lu, Xing (2012). A Burkean analysis of China is not happy: A rhetoric of nationalism. Chinese Journal of Communication, 5(2), 194-209.

  9. Li, Luzhou, & Witteborn, Saskia (2012). Confucianism in the Chinese media: an analysis of the revolutionary history television drama In Those Passionate Days. Chinese Journal of Communication, 5(2), 160-177.

  10. Huang, Xinkai (2012). Lifestyles in virtual communities: collaborative consumption and interaction. Chinese Journal of Communication, 5(1), 109-127.

  11. Chua, Beng Huat (2012). The regionalization of television and China. Chinese Journal of Communication, 5(1), 16-23.

  12. Schiller, Dan (2011). Geopolitical-economic conflict and network infrastructures. Chinese Journal of Communication, 4(1), 90-107.

  13. Davis, Darrell William (2011). Questioning diaspora: mobility, mutation, and historiography of the Shaw Brothers film studio. Chinese Journal of Communication, 4(1), 40-59.

  14. Szablewicz, Marcella (2010). The ill effects of “opium for the spirit”: a critical cultural analysis of China's Internet addiction moral panic. Chinese Journal of Communication, 3(4), 453-470.

  15. Hong, Yu (2010). The politics of a socialist harmonious society in the aftermath of China's neoliberal development. Chinese Journal of Communication, 3(3), 311-328.

  16. Chen, Yi-Ning Katherine (2010). Examining the presentation of self in popular blogs: a cultural perspective. Chinese Journal of Communication, 3(1), 28-41.

  17. Meng, Bingchun (2009). Who needs democracy if we can pick our favorite girl? Super Girl as media spectacle. Chinese Journal of Communication, 2(3), 257-272.

  18. Zhu, Ying (2009). Li Yang's socially conscious film as marginal cinema – China's state-capital alliance and its cultural ramifications. Chinese Journal of Communication, 2(2), 212-226.

  19. Schiller, Dan (2008). An update on China in the political economy of information and communications. Chinese Journal of Communication, 1(1), 109-116.

  20. Erni, John Nguyet (2008). Enchanted: Harry Potter and magical capitalism in urban China. Chinese Journal of Communication, 1(2), 138-155.