Media in Hong Kong: Press Freedom and Political Change, 1967-2005Routledge, 2007年3月12日 - 288 頁 This book examines the Hong Kong media over a forty year period, focusing in particular on how its newspapers and TV stations have struggled for press freedom under the colonial British administration, as well as Chinese rule. Making full use of newly declassified material, extensive interviews and specific case-studies, it provides an illuminating analysis of the dynamics of political power and its relationship with media censorship. Overall, this book is an impressive discussion of the evolving face of the Hong Kong media, and is an important contribution to theoretical debates on the relationship between political power, economics, identity and journalism. |
內容
1 Introduction | 1 |
2 British policy and the Hong Kong communist press 19671970 | 17 |
A textual analysis during the transition period 19931997 | 45 |
A textual analysis of news coverage in the posthandover period | 78 |
5 Regime change and media control | 117 |
6 Journalistic norms and people power | 146 |
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advertisement Albert Cheng appeared Apple Daily Beijing Beijing’s broadcaster campaign Chan Chapter Chen Shui-bian Cheng Chief Executive China Morning Post Chinese authorities Chinese Communist Chinese government Chinese official colonial communist press coverage critical criticised culture Deng Xiaoping editor example fact Falun Gong foreign former Government’s Governor handover headline HKJA HKSAR Hong Kong Economic Hong Kong government Hong Kong Journalists Hong Kong media Hong Kong press Ibid independent influence instance Interview issues Kong Economic Journal Kong Journalists Association Kong’s Kuok Lee Teng-hui liberal London mainland China media organisations Ming Pao Daily MPDN nationalistic newspaper Oriental Daily paper Party Peking political position press freedom pressure pro-China proprietor protest published regime release role RTHK rule SCMP self-censorship Sing Tao Sino-British South China Morning staff story tion Tung Chee-hwa Willy Lam Xi Yang’s Xi’s Xinhua News Agency