[1]
Anders Hansen 1998. Mass communication research methods. Macmillan.
[2]
Berger, A.A. 2000. Media and communication research methods: an introduction to qualitative and quantitative approaches. Sage.
[3]
Bin, Z. 1999. Mouthpiece or money-spinner?: The double life of Chinese television in the late 1990s. International Journal of Cultural Studies. 2, 3 (Dec. 1999), 291–305. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1177/136787799900200301.
[4]
de Burgh, H. 2003. Kings without Crowns? The Re-Emergence of Investigative Journalism in China. Media, Culture & Society. 25, 6 (Nov. 2003), 801–820. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1177/0163443703256005.
[5]
Burgh, H. de 2005. Making journalists: diverse models, global issues. Routledge.
[6]
Burgh, H. de 2003. The Chinese journalist: mediating information in the world’s most populous country. Routledge.
[7]
Burn, A. and Parker, D. 2003. Analysing media texts. Continuum.
[8]
Dahlgren, P. and ebrary, Inc 1995. Television and the public sphere: citizenship, democracy, and the media. Sage Publications.
[9]
Donald, S. et al. 2002. Media in China: consumption, content and crisis. RoutledgeCurzon.
[10]
Emden, C. and Midgley, D.R. 2012. Changing perceptions of the public sphere. Berghahn Books.
[11]
Garnham, N 1992. The Media and the Public Sphere. Habermas and the public sphere. MIT Press.
[12]
Goode, L. 2005. Jürgen Habermas: democracy and the public sphere. Pluto Press.
[13]
Hassid, J. 2008. Controlling the Chinese Media: An Uncertain Business. Asian Survey. 48, 3 (Jun. 2008), 414–430. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1525/as.2008.48.3.414.
[14]
Hua, X. 2000. Morality Discourse in the Marketplace: narratives in the Chinese television news magazine Oriental Horizon. Journalism Studies. 1, 4 (Jan. 2000), 637–647. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/146167000441349.
[15]
Kalathil, S. 2003. China’s new media sector: Keeping the state in. The Pacific Review. 16, 4 (Dec. 2003), 489–501. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/0951274032000132227.
[16]
Keane, M. 2002. As a Hundred Television Formats Bloom, a Thousand Television Stations Contend. Journal of Contemporary China. 11, 30 (Feb. 2002), 5–16. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/10670560120091110.
[17]
Keane, M. 2001. Broadcasting policy, creative compliance and the myth of civil society in China. Media, Culture & Society. 23, 6 (Nov. 2001), 783–798. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1177/016344301023006006.
[18]
Keane, M. 1999. Television and civilization: The unity of opposites? International Journal of Cultural Studies. 2, 2 (Aug. 1999), 246–259. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1177/136787799900200205.
[19]
Latham, K. 2000. Nothing but the Truth: News Media, Power and Hegemony in South China. The China Quarterly. 163, (Sep. 2000). DOI:https://doi.org/10.1017/S0305741000014594.
[20]
Lee, C.-C. 2001. Beyond Orientalist Discourses: Media and Democracy in Asia. Javnost - The Public. 8, 2 (Jan. 2001), 7–20. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/13183222.2001.11008769.
[21]
Lee, C.-C. 1999. Power, Money, and Media: Communication Patterns and Bureaucratic Control in Cultural China. Northwestern University Press.
[22]
Li, J. 2003. Chinese media, global contexts. RoutledgeCurzon.
[23]
McCormick, Barrett L and Liu 13AD. "Globalisation and the Chinese Media”. [ Chinese Media, Global Contexts (Routledgecurzon Studies in Asia’s Transformations) [ CHINESE MEDIA, GLOBAL CONTEXTS (ROUTLEDGECURZON STUDIES IN ASIA’S TRANSFORMATIONS) ] By Chin-Chuan Lee ( Author )Apr-18-2003 Hardcover. Routledge. 139–158.
[24]
Pan, Z. et al. 2011. Exploring structured inequality in Internet use behavior. Asian Journal of Communication. 21, 2 (Apr. 2011), 116–132. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/01292986.2010.543555.
[25]
Stanley Rosen 2010. Is the Internet a Positive Force in the Development of Civil Society, a Public Sphere, and Democratization in China? International Journal of Communication. 4, (2010), 509–516.
[26]
Stockmann, Daniela 2010. Information Overload? Collecting, Managing and Analysing Chinese media Content. Contemporary Chinese politics: new sources, methods, and field strategies. Cambridge University Press.
[27]
Stockmann, Daniela 2010. Information Overload? Collecting, Managing and Analysing Chinese media Content. Contemporary Chinese politics: new sources, methods, and field strategies. Cambridge University Press.
[28]
Wang, J. 2011. Soft power in China: public diplomacy through communication. Palgrave Macmillan.
[29]
Weber, I. 2002. Reconfiguring Chinese Propaganda and Control Modalities: A case study of Shanghai’s television system. Journal of Contemporary China. 11, 30 (Feb. 2002), 53–75. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/10670560120091147.
[30]
Wu Guoguang 2000. One Head, Many Mouths: Diversifying Press Structures in Reform China. Power, Money and Media. Northwestern University Press. 6–45.
[31]
Xiaoling Zhang 2013. How ready is China for a China-style world order? China’s state media discourse under construction. Ecquid Novi: African Journalism Studies. 34, 3 (2013), 79–101. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/02560054.2013.834834.
[32]
Yang, G. 2003. The Internet and the Rise of a Transnational Chinese Cultural Sphere. Media, Culture & Society. 25, 4 (Jul. 2003), 469–490. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1177/01634437030254003.
[33]
Yang, G. 2009. The power of the internet in China: citizen activism online. Columbia University Press.
[34]
Yuezhi, Z. 2000. Watchdogs on Party Leashes? Contexts and implications of investigative journalism in post-Deng China. Journalism Studies. 1, 4 (Jan. 2000), 577–597. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/146167000441312.
[35]
ZHANG, X. 2007. Breaking News, Media Coverage and ‘Citizen’s Right to Know’ in China. Journal of Contemporary China. 16, 53 (Nov. 2007), 535–545. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/10670560701562259.
[36]
Zhang, X. 2011. From Totalitarianism to Hegemony: the reconfiguration of the party-state and the transformation of Chinese communication. Journal of Contemporary China. 20, 68 (Jan. 2011), 103–115. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/10670564.2011.520850.
[37]
Zhang, X. 2006. Reading between the headlines: SARS, Focus and TV current affairs programmes in China. Media, Culture & Society. 28, 5 (Sep. 2006), 715–737. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1177/0163443706067023.
[38]
Zhang, X. 2011. The transformation of political communication in China: from propaganda to hegemony. World Scientific.
[39]
Zhang, X. and Guo, Z. 2012. Hegemony and counter-hegemony: the politics of dialects in TV programs in China. Chinese Journal of Communication. 5, 3 (Sep. 2012), 300–315. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/17544750.2012.701421.
[40]
Zhang, X. and Zheng, Y. 2009. China’s information and communications technology revolution: social changes and state responses. Routledge.
[41]
Zhang, Xiaoling. 2007. Seeking Effective Public Space: Chinese Media at the Local Level? China: An International Journal. 5, 1 (2007), 55–77. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1353/chn.2007.0008.
[42]
Zhang Xiaoling 2011. "The Mass Media”. Understanding Chinese society. Routledge.
[43]
Zhao, Y. 2008. Communication in China: political economy, power, and conflict. Rowman & Littlefield.
[44]
Zhao, Y. 1998. Media, market, and democracy in China: between the party line and the bottom line. University of Illinois Press.
[45]
Zheng, Y. 2005. Information Technology, Public Space, and Collective Action in China. Comparative Political Studies. 38, 5 (Jun. 2005), 507–536. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1177/0010414004273505.
[46]
Zheng, Y. 2008. Technological empowerment: the Internet, state, and society in China. Stanford University Press.
[47]
Zhu, Y. 2012. Two billion eyes: the story of China Central Television. The New Press.