Perceiving Different Chinas: Paradigm Change in the “Personalized Journalism” of Elite U.S. Journalists, 1976–1989

Authors

  • Yunya Song Hong Kong Baptist University
  • Chin-Chuan Lee City University of Hong Kong

Keywords:

America’s China reporting, journalistic paradigm, enduring values, international news, personalized journalism

Abstract

This article investigates how elite U.S. correspondents recast their journalistic paradigm in response to the momentous collapse of the Cultural Revolution in 1976, which dealt a fatal blow to the validity of much of their previous writings. Elements of the constructed “virtuous socialist China” in the 1970s came to be discredited in the 1980s and were replaced by celebratory discourse on China’s adoption of market economy. The romantic imaginings about China’s “new socialist way” stood in sharp contrast to Western-cum-universal values of freedom, democracy, and individualism, as well as American lifestyles, capital, and know-how. The reporting hinged on how journalists employed the “enduring values” of America as paradigms to make sense of China’s conditions and U.S.–China relations. The “radical” journalistic paradigm of the 1970s was repudiated by the collapse of the Cultural Revolution, whereas the “liberal” paradigm of the 1980s was shattered by the Tiananmen crackdown.

Author Biographies

Yunya Song, Hong Kong Baptist University

Yunya Song is Assistant Professor in the Department of Journalism and Director of the Applied Communication Research Lab at the School of Communication, Hong Kong Baptist University. Her research on journalism and media politics has appeared in, among other journals, International Journal of Press/Politics, International Communication Gazette, Journalism Studies and Public Relations Review.  Phone:+(852)- 3411 8151 

Chin-Chuan Lee, City University of Hong Kong

Chin-Chuan Lee is Chair Professor in the Department of Media and Communication and Director of the Centre for Communication Studies at City University of Hong Kong.  He is a coauthor of Communication, Public Opinion, and Globalization in Urban China (Routledge, 2014) and editor of Internationalizing “International Communication” (University of Michigan Press, 2014).Phone:+(852)- 3442 8622 

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Published

2016-08-30

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Section

Articles