School of Journalism and Communication, CUHK - Others
 

Others

  1. Donald, Stephanie Hemelryk (2012). “Recollections”: a subset of the project on posters of the Cultural Revolution. Chinese Journal of Communication, 5(1), 68-77.

  2. Lugg, Alexander (2011). Chinese online fiction: taste publics, entertainment, and Candle in the Tomb. Chinese Journal of Communication, 4(2), 121-136.

  3. Edwards, Jason A., & Calhoun, Lindsay R. (2011). Redress for old wounds: Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper's apology for the Chinese head tax. Chinese Journal of Communication, 4(1), 73-89.

  4. Ha, Louisa (2010). Emerging media and challenges in Chinese communities. Chinese Journal of Communication, 3(4), 377-383.

  5. Han, Dong (2010). Can I own my writings and sell them too? A brief history of copyright in China from the late Qing era to Mao's China. Chinese Journal of Communication, 3(3), 329-346.

  6. Chang, Yvonne Yanrong (2010). Are you my guest or my child? Mothers' uncertainties in interacting with their returnee children in China. Chinese Journal of Communication, 3(3), 167-184.

  7. Huang, Yi-Hui (2010). Theorizing Chinese communication research: a holistic framework for comparative studies. Chinese Journal of Communication, 3(1), 95-113.

  8. Wen, Wei-chun, Yu, Tzu-hsiang, & Benoit, William L. (2009). Our hero Wang can't be wrong! A case study of collectivistic image repair in Taiwan. Chinese Journal of Communication, 2(2), 174-192.

  9. Donald, Stephanie Hemelryk (2009). Education, class and adaptation in China's world city. Chinese Journal of Communication, 2(1), 25-35.

  10. Tian, Dexin (2008). The USTR Special 301 Reports: an analysis of the US hegemonic pressure upon the organizational change in China's IPR regime. Chinese Journal of Communication, 1(2), 224-241.

  11. Croucher, Stephen M. (2008). An analysis of Montréal's Quartier Chinois and sense of self: Une Loi peut faire mal au dragon,mais La Loi ne peut pas tuer le dragon. Chinese Journal of Communication, 1(2), 213-223.

  12. Sun, Zhen (2008). Challenging the dominant stories about the Boxer Rebellion: Chinese Minister Wu Ting‐Fang's narrative. Chinese Journal of Communication, 1(2), 196-202.