Why Does Media Marketization Reinforce Media Control in Post-Tiananmen China?: A Political Economic Theory of Media Control

The current Chinese media political literature ascribes China’s effective media control to Communist Party censorship. Up until now, scholars and authors have overlooked how the enormous social and economic changes that China has undergone since economic reform has affected media control. This disse...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: He, Nanchu
Other Authors: Verdun, Amy
Format: Others
Language:English
en
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1828/6683
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spelling ndltd-uvic.ca-oai-dspace.library.uvic.ca-1828-66832017-07-11T06:00:53Z Why Does Media Marketization Reinforce Media Control in Post-Tiananmen China?: A Political Economic Theory of Media Control He, Nanchu Verdun, Amy Xu, Feng Repressive State capitalism Marketizing media control The current Chinese media political literature ascribes China’s effective media control to Communist Party censorship. Up until now, scholars and authors have overlooked how the enormous social and economic changes that China has undergone since economic reform has affected media control. This dissertation explores how such changes influence media control in China. It first examines the Chinese political economy and then focuses on studying China’s media, which has gone through considerable change since economic reform. Previously, Party ideological indoctrination and violent suppression were rampant. Today’s situation, however, could be characterized as indoctrination mingled with entertainment or “indoctritainment” (Sun 2002), and repression with an absence of full freedom of the media. I argue that “repressive state capitalism” has propelled economic development in China, particularly since 1989. In the reform era, repression coexists with economic development and is actually productive to Chinese economic growth because repression has both ensured state intervention in the economy and safeguarded a stable environment that is pivotal to the flourishing of economic activities. Using this political economic approach, I propose a political economic theory of “marketizing media control” to account for effective media control after media marketization, beginning with an empirical investigation of the traditional media and ending with an investigation of the new media in China. In short, repressive state capitalism is my contribution to political economic theory and marketizing media control is my contribution to Chinese media politics. Graduate 2015-09-10T16:05:30Z 2016-09-04T11:22:08Z 2015 2015-09-10 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/1828/6683 English en Available to the World Wide Web application/pdf
collection NDLTD
language English
en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Repressive State capitalism
Marketizing media control
spellingShingle Repressive State capitalism
Marketizing media control
He, Nanchu
Why Does Media Marketization Reinforce Media Control in Post-Tiananmen China?: A Political Economic Theory of Media Control
description The current Chinese media political literature ascribes China’s effective media control to Communist Party censorship. Up until now, scholars and authors have overlooked how the enormous social and economic changes that China has undergone since economic reform has affected media control. This dissertation explores how such changes influence media control in China. It first examines the Chinese political economy and then focuses on studying China’s media, which has gone through considerable change since economic reform. Previously, Party ideological indoctrination and violent suppression were rampant. Today’s situation, however, could be characterized as indoctrination mingled with entertainment or “indoctritainment” (Sun 2002), and repression with an absence of full freedom of the media. I argue that “repressive state capitalism” has propelled economic development in China, particularly since 1989. In the reform era, repression coexists with economic development and is actually productive to Chinese economic growth because repression has both ensured state intervention in the economy and safeguarded a stable environment that is pivotal to the flourishing of economic activities. Using this political economic approach, I propose a political economic theory of “marketizing media control” to account for effective media control after media marketization, beginning with an empirical investigation of the traditional media and ending with an investigation of the new media in China. In short, repressive state capitalism is my contribution to political economic theory and marketizing media control is my contribution to Chinese media politics. === Graduate
author2 Verdun, Amy
author_facet Verdun, Amy
He, Nanchu
author He, Nanchu
author_sort He, Nanchu
title Why Does Media Marketization Reinforce Media Control in Post-Tiananmen China?: A Political Economic Theory of Media Control
title_short Why Does Media Marketization Reinforce Media Control in Post-Tiananmen China?: A Political Economic Theory of Media Control
title_full Why Does Media Marketization Reinforce Media Control in Post-Tiananmen China?: A Political Economic Theory of Media Control
title_fullStr Why Does Media Marketization Reinforce Media Control in Post-Tiananmen China?: A Political Economic Theory of Media Control
title_full_unstemmed Why Does Media Marketization Reinforce Media Control in Post-Tiananmen China?: A Political Economic Theory of Media Control
title_sort why does media marketization reinforce media control in post-tiananmen china?: a political economic theory of media control
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/1828/6683
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