Chinese Communication Research:
1980-1989

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Last November 22, 2000

Anderson, M. H. (1981). China's 'Great Leap' toward Madison Avenue. Journal of Communication, 31, 10-22.

Atwood, L. E. & Lin, N. (1982). Cankao Xiaoxi: News for China's cadre. Journalism Quarterly, 59, 240-248.

Barme, G. (1980). Notes on publishing in China, 1976-1979. Australian Journal of Chinese Affairs, 4, 167-174.

Bennett, A. A., III. (1983). Missionary journalist in China: Young J. Allen and his magazines, 1860-1883. Athens: University of Georgia Press.

Bishop, R. L. (1989). Qi lai! Mobilizing one billion Chinese: The Chinese communication system. Ames: Iowa State University Press.

Bishop, R. L. & Hansen, J. (1981). Content of Taiwan's English and Chinese press. Journalism Quarterly, 58, 456-460.

Blecher, M. (1983). The mass line and leader-mass relations and communication in basic-level rural communities. In G. C. Chu & L. K. Hsu (Eds.), China's new social fabric (pp. 63-86). London: Kegan Paul International.

Cell, C. P. (1983). Communication in China's mass mobilization campaigns. In G. C. Chu & L. K. Hsu (Eds.), China's new social fabric (pp. 25-46). London: Kegan Paul International.

Chan, A. B. (1988/1989). Gagging the Hong Kong press: Slippery road to 1997. Gazette, 42, 161-175.

Chan, J. M. & Lee, C. C. (1984). Journalistic 'paradigm' on civil protests: A case study in Hong Kong. In A. Arno & W. Disssanayake (eds.), The news media in national and international conflict. Boulder, CO: Westview Press.

Chan, J. M. & Lee, C. C. (1988). Press ideology and organizational control in Hong Kong. Communication Research, 15, 185-197.

Chang, C. P. (1986). Developments in Peking's new cultural policy. Issues & Studies, 22.

Chang, T. K. (1984). How three elite papers covered Reagan China policy. Journalism Quarterly, 61, 429-432.

Chang, T. K. (1988). The news and U.S.-China policy: Symbols in newspapers and documents. Journalism Quarterly, 65, 320-327.

Chang, T. K. (1989). Access to the news and foreign policy: The case of China, 1950-84. Newspaper Research Journal, 10, 33-44.

Chang, T. K. (1989). The impact of presidential statements on press editorials regarding U.S.-China policy, 1950-1984. Communication Research, 16, 486-509.

Chang, W. H. (1989). Mass media in China: The history and the future. Ames: Iowa State University Press.

Cheek, T. (1989). Redefining propaganda: Debates on the role of journalism in post-Mao mainland China. Issues and Studies, 25, 47-74.

Chen, K. H. (1987). Changes of American news coverage in two Chinese newspapers: A comparison. In D. L. Paletz (Ed.), Political communication research: Approaches, studies, assessments (pp. 129-147). Norwood, NJ: Ablex Publishing Corporation.

Cheng, C. Y. (1988). The I Ching as a symbolic system of integrated communication. In W. Dissanayake (Ed.), Communication theory: The Asian perspective (pp. 79-104). Singapore: Asian Mass Communication Research and Information Centre.

Chiao, C. (1984) The Chinese revolutionary opera: A change of theme. In G. Wang & W. Dissanayake (Eds.), Continuity
and change in communication systems: An Asian perspective
(pp. 81-94). Honolulu: East-West Communication Institute.

Chu, G. C. (1983). Societal integration and communication in China. In G. C. Chu & L. K. Hsu (Eds.), China's new social fabric (pp. 3-21). London: Kegan Paul International.

Chu, G. C. & Chu, L. L. (1981). Parties in conflict: Letters to the editor of the People's Daily. Journal of Communication, 31, 74-91.

Chu, G. C. & Chu, L. L. (1983). Mass media and conflict resolution: An analysis of letters to the editor. In G. C. Chu & L. K. Hsu (Eds.), China's new social fabric (pp. 175-224). London: Kegan Paul International.

Chu, G. C. & Hsu, L. K. (Eds.). (1983). China's new social fabric. London: Kegan Paul International.

Chu, J. (1982). Advertising in China: Its policy, practice and evolution. Journalism Quarterly, 59, 40-45, 91.

Chu, J. (1984). The gathering of news about China. Gazette, 33, 87-106.

Chu, L. L. (1983). Press criticism and self-criticism in Communist China: An analysis of ideology, structure, and operation. Gazette, 31, 47-61.

Chu, L. L. (1988). Mass communication theory: A Chinese perspective. In W. Dissanayake (Ed.), Communication theory: The Asian perspective (pp. 126-138). Singapore: Asian Mass Communication Research and Information Centre.

Coffey, M., Frerich, J., & Bishop, R. (1977). China watchers and the cultural revolution. Journalism Quarterly, 55, 77-83, 125.

Cragin, J. P., Kwan, Y. K., Ho, Y. N. (1984). Social ethics and the emergence of advertising in China. Journal of Business Ethics, 3, 91-94.

De Boer, C. (1980). The polls: Changing attitudes and policies toward China. Public Opinion Quarterly, 44, 267-273.

Falkenheim, V. C. (1983). Participation, communication, and political integration. In G. C. Chu & L. K. Hsu (Eds.), China's new social fabric (pp. 47-61). London: Kegan Paul International.

Fang, H. (1985). A brief account of book publishing in China. In Altbach, P. G., Arboleda, A. A. & Gopinathan, S. (Eds.), Publishing in the Third World: Knowledge and development (pp. 131-137). Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann.

Feldman, G. (1986). The organization of publishing in China. China Quarterly, 107, 519-529.

Grant, J. (1988). Internal reporting by investigative journalists in China and its influence on government policy. Gazette, 41, 53-65.

Greagor, A. J. & Chang, M. H. (1985). The Taiwan independence movement: The failure of political persuasion. Political Communication and Persuasion, 2, 363-391.

Guan, K. (1989). Journalism ethics in China. In T. W. Cooper (Ed.), Communication ethics and global change (pp. 194-203). White Plains, NY: Longman.

Guo, Z. (1986). A chronicle of private radio in Shanghai. Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media, 30, 379-392.

Hansen, J. P. & Bishop. R. L. (1981). Press freedom on Taiwan: The mini hundred flowers period. Journalism Quarterly, 58, 38-42.

Hilderbrandt, H. W. (1988). A Chinese managerial view of business communication. Management Communication Quarterly, 2, 217-234.

Ho, S. & Sin, Y. (1986). Advertising in China: Looking back at looking forward. International Journal of Advertising, 5, 307-316.

Ho, S. & Chan, C. (1989). Advertising in China: Problems and prospects. International Journal of Advertising, 8, 79-87.

Howkins, J. (1980). The media in China. London: Nord Media.

Howkins, J. (1982). Mass communication in China. New York: Longman.

Hu, Y. (1986). On the party's journalism work. In B. Womack (Ed.), Media and the Chinese public: A survey of the Beijing media audience (pp. 174-198). Armonk, NY: M. E. Sharpe.

Kenney, K. (1987). Photojournalism education growing in Chinese schools. Journalism Educator, 42, 19-21.

Kwan, Y. K. (1982). Contemporary advertising attitudes and practices among executive in the People's Republic of China. Journal of the Market Research Society, 25, 59-71.

Lau, T. Y. (1988). Introducing cable television into Hong Kong: Political and economic implications. Telecommunications Policy, 12, 379-392.

Lau, T. Y. (1989). Market analysis of the Chinese-language newspapers in the U.S. Gazette, 43, 77-92.

Lee, C. C. (1981). The United States as seen through the People's Daily. Journal of Communication, 31, 92-101.

Lee, C. C. (1982). Media images of America: A China case study. In L. E. Atwood, S. J. Bullion, & S. M. Murphy (Eds.), International perspectives on news (pp. 53-76). Carbondale, IL: Southern Illinois University Press.

Lee, C. C. (1985). Partisan press coverage of government news in Hong Kong. Journalism Quarterly, 62, 770-776.

Lee, L. O. F. & Nathan, A. J. (1985). The beginnings of mass culture: Journalism and fiction in the late Ch'ing and beyond. In D. Johnson, A. J. Nathan, & E. S. Rawski (Eds.), Popular culture in late imperial China (pp. 360-395). Berkeley: University of California Press.

Liao, K. S. (1980). Mass media and crisis communication in China: Chinese press reactions in the 1962 Sino-Indian border conflict. Communication Research, 7, 69-94.

Lieberthal, K. G. (1983). Communication from the Party center: The transmission process for Central Committee documents. In G. C. Chu & L. K. Hsu (Eds.), China's new social fabric (pp. 89-118). London: Kegan Paul International.

Lin, C. & Salwen, M. B. (1986). Three press systems view Sino-American normalization. Journalism Quarterly, 63, 360-62.

Liu, A. P. L. (1981). Mass campaigns in the People's Republic of China. In R. Rice & W. Paisley (Eds.), Public communication campaigns (pp. 199-223). Beverly Hills, CA: Sage.

Liu, A. P. L. (1982). Problems in communications in China's modernization. Asian Survey, 22, 481-499.

Liu, M. C. (1983). Liang Ch'i-Ch'ao and the media: A historic retrospection. Gazette, 31, 35-45.

Liu, M. C. (1985). Women and the media in China: An historical perspective. Journalism Quarterly, 62, 45-52.

Lo, T. W. & Yung, A. (1988). Multinational service firms in centrally-planned economies: Foreign advertising agencies in the PRC. Marketing International Research, 28, 26-33.

Lou, C. C. E. & Borden, G. A. (1988/1989). Management communication in a multinational corporation: The U.S. and Taiwan. Howard Journal of Communication, 1, 219-231.

Lull, J. & Sun, S. W. (1988). Agent of modernization: Television and urban Chinese families. In J. Lull (Ed.), World families watch television (pp. 193-236). Newbury Park: Sage.

MacKinnon, S. R.,& Friesen, O. (1987). China reporting: An oral history of American journalism in the 1930s and 1940s. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.

Mathews, L. (1988). Up and down the roller coaster: U.S. press coverage of China. In H. A. Mitchell (Ed.), The secondbiennial Edgar Snow symposium in Kansas City (pp. 19-30). Beijing: Smedley-Strong-Snow Society of China.

McCormick, R. (1980). Central broadcasting and television university. China Quarterly, 81, 129-136.

McCormick, R. (1986). The radio and television universities and the development of higher education in China. China Quarterly, 105, March.

Meisner, M. (1983). Horizontal mobilization and communication for conflict resolution: The Tachai case. In G. C. Chu & L. K. Hsu (Eds.), China's new social fabric (pp. 225-247). London: Kegan Paul International.

Mills, W. (1981). Treatment of foreign policy issues in the regional Chinese press. Asian Survey, 21, 795-810.

Mulligan, W. A. (1988). Remnants of cultural revolution in Chinese journalism of the 1980s. Journalism Quarterly, 65, 20-25.

Okechuky, C. & Wang, G. (1988). The effectiveness of Chinese print advertisements in North America. Journal of Advertising Research, 28, 25-34.

Oksenberg, M. (1988). Recurring problems and opportunities in foreign journalists' coverage of China. In H. A. Mitchell (Ed.), The second biennial Edgar Snow symposium in Kansas City (pp. 55-68). Beijing: Smedley-Strong-Snow Society of China.

Pang, K. K. F. (1984). Chivalric stories in Hong Kong media. In G. Wang & W. Dissanayake (Eds.), Continuity and change in communication systems: An Asian perspective (pp. 215-230). Honolulu: East-West Communication Institute.

Peng, D. (1988). A Chinese view of the adequacy of American journalism's coverage of China. In H. A. Mitchell (Ed.), The second biennial Edgar Snow symposium in Kansas City (pp. 9-14). Beijing: Smedley-Strong-Snow Society of China.

Reynolds, F. C. (1985). Chinese learn Western J-skills from U.S. teacher. Journalism Educator, 40, 7-10.

Rice, M. D. & Lu, Z. (1988). A content analysis of Chinese magazine advertisements. Journal of Advertising, 17, 43-48.

Robinson, D. (1981). Changing functions of mass media in the People's Republic of China. Journal of Communication, 31, 58-73.

Rogers, E. M., Zhao, X. Y., Pan, Z. D., Chen, M., & Beijing Journalists Assn. (1985). The Beijing audience survey. Communication Research, 12, 179-208.

Rosen, S. (1989). Public opinion and reform in the People's Republic of China. Studies in Comparative Communism, 23, 153-170.

Schmuck, C. (1987). Broadcasts for a billion: The growth of commercial TV in China. Columbia Journal of World Business, 22, 27-34.

Semenik, R. J., Zhou, N., & Moore, W. L. (1986). Chinese managers' attitudes toward advertising in China. Journal of Advertising, 15, 56-62.

Sommerland, E. L. (1981). Communication in the new China. Media Information Australia, 22, 23-29.

Starck, K. & Yu, X. Loud thunder, small raindrops: The reform movement and press in China. Gazette, 42, 143-159.

Stewart, S. & Campbell, N. (1986). Advertising in mainland China and Hong Kong: A preliminary study. International Journal of Advertising, 5, 317-323.

Stewart, S. & Campbell, N. (1988). Advertising in China and Hong Kong: A preliminary attempt at some comparisons of style. International Journal of Advertising, 7.

Tam, K. K. (1988). Taoism and the Chinese view of literary communication.In W. Dissanayake (Ed.), Communication theory: The Asian perspective (pp. 105-125). Singapore: Asian Mass Communication Research and Information Centre.

Tan, A. S., Li, S., and Simpson, C. (1986). American TV and social stereotypes of Americans in Taiwan and Mexico. Journalism Quarterly, 63, 809-814.

Teng, J. T. & Liu, P. Y. (1986). The politics of reportage literature in mainland China. Issues & Studies, 22, 28-49.

Terell, R. L. (1984). Modernization and the media in China. Gazette, 33, 143-154.

Terell, R. L. (1986). The first 25 years of the Beijing Review. Gazette, 37, 191-220.

Thomson, J. C., Jr. (1989). Jilted again: The U.S. media's courtship with democracy in China. Gannett Center Journal, 3, 91-103.

Tse, D., Belk, R. W., & Zhou, N. (1989). Becoming a consumer society: A longitudinal and cross-cultural content analysis of print ads from Hong Kong, the People's Republic of China and Taiwan. Journal of Consumer Research, 15, 457-472.

Ure, J. (1989). The future of telecommunications in Hong Kong. Telecommunications Policy, 13, 371-378.

Wang, G. (1982). A newspaper without news. Journalism Quarterly, 59, 286-289.

Wang, G. (1984). Televised puppetry in Taiwan--An example of the marriage between a modern medium and a folk medium. In G. Wang & W. Dissanayake (Eds.), Continuity and change in communication Systems: An Asian perspective (pp. 169-180). Honolulu: East-West Communication Insititute.

Wang, G. (1984). The People's Daily and Nixon's visit of China. In A. Arno & W. Dissanayake (Eds.), The news media in national and international conflict (pp. 134-135). Boulder, CO: Westview Press.

Wang, R. (1988). Major developments in Chinese telecommunications: An overview. International Communication Bulletin, 23, 4-9.

Warren, J. (1988). Foreign and domestic news content of Chinese television. Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media, 32, 219-224.

Womack, B. (1986). Editor's introduction: Media and the Chinese public. Chinese Sociology and Anthropology, 18, 6-53.

Yu, J. (1988). The abortive 1956 reform of Chinese journalism. Journalism Quarterly, 65, 328-334.

Yu, Y. C. & Riffe, D. (1989). Chiang and Mao in U.S. news magazines. Journalism Quarterly, 66, 913-919.

Zhang, J. & Peng, J. (1986). Chinese journalism education: Slow progress since 1918. Journalism Educator, 41, 11-13.

Zhao, X. Y. (1989). Effects of foreign media use, government and traditional influences on Chinese women's values. Revue Europeene des Sciences Sociales, 27, 239-251.

Zhu, J. H. (1988). Public opinion polling in China: A descriptive review. Gazette, 41, 127-138.

Zita, K. (1987). Modernizing China's telecommunictions: Implications for international firms. London: The Economist Publications.

Zou, D., Wang, F., & Zheng, M. (1988). China. In P. Rosen (Ed.), International handbook of broadcasting systems (pp. 69-78). Westport, CT: Greenwood.
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