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