Media at work in China and India : discovering and dissecting

書誌事項

Media at work in China and India : discovering and dissecting

edited by Robin Jeffrey and Ronojoy Sen

Sage, 2015

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注記

Includes bibliographical references and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

Anyone who visits India or China will puzzle over their vast media systems. Though they exercise immense influence, the world knows very little about the media landscape in the two countries. The world's two most populous countries, comprising close to 40 per cent of the global population, have disputed boundaries and the legacy of the 1962 war. Mass media in both countries plays a pivotal role in domestic politics and is capable of telling provocative nationalist stories. This book helps readers to understand the complexities of media in India and China, and their similarities and differences. It introduces the two media systems, the people who work in them, the work they produce and the pressures that influence their work. It analyses how economic forces drive media, how newsrooms work and how governments in each country manage the coverage of disasters. Media at Work in China and India fosters greater reflection, curiosity and, perhaps, even wisdom, about fast-changing media in these 21st century powerhouses.

目次

Preface Introduction: Media at Work-Four Sames and Three Differents - Robin Jeffrey and Ronojoy Sen I: STRUCTURES Development and Communication: The Evolution of Chinese Media - Li Yang Newspapers in India: Diversity, Ownership and Future - Robin Jeffrey India on Television: Owners, Politicians and Debate in a Democracy - Nalin Mehta China's Cultural War against the West - Ying Zhu II. REPORTERS Portrait of a Chinese Journalist - John Zhou Portrait of an Indian Journalist - Anshuman Tiwari Experience: Understanding and Reporting India - Tang Lu Media, Messaging and Misperceptions in India-China Relations: Reading the Tea Leaves - Ananth Krishnan III. PRACTICES China in the Times of India - Ronojoy Sen The View from an Indian Television Newsroom: What Makes Us Different? - Srinjoy Chowdhury Trying Hard to Be Soft: The Chinese State and India in CCTV News - Danny Geevarghesei The CCTV-Reuters Relationship - John Jirik Covering Commerce: How Indian Newspapers Treat Business, Economics and the China Story - Subhomoy Bhattacharjee IV. DISSECTIONS Media Control as Stability Maintenance: The Case of the Sichuan Earthquake - Ming Xia When Officials and Media Failed: The Response to the Uttarakhand Floods, 2013 - Anup Kumar Social Media: China and India Compared - Jonathan Benney, Nimmi Rangaswamy Shooting the Messengers - Simon Long Glossary Index

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