ABSTRACT

The relationship between China and the United States has been marked by a lack of mutual comprehension that stretches from America's missionary paternalism in the early twentieth century to the fears and fascinations of the present. Throughout the twentieth century China has attracted the attention of American journalists, from the first China hands who covered an ancient country lurching into the modern world, to the chroniclers of World War II and the Chinese civil war, to the reporters who today explore the contradictions of China's economy. Covering China looks at the questions, concerns, and conceptions of all the generations of American reporters against the backdrop of Chinese history and China's own media.Covering China is divided into three sections. "Histories" takes up the events, anniversaries, and processes that have shaped Chinese and American media coverage over the century. Included here are chapters focusing on the civil war and analyzing American reporting in the 1930s and 1940s in their many viewpoints, as well as in the decades when China was closed to American journalists. Other chapters consider the influence on journalism of various political movements from the anti-Western May 4th movement of 1918 to the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989. "Communicating" explores the challenges of explaining China to Americans and America to the Chinese. Among the topics covered here are the Chinese media reaction to the Clinton scandal, the status of Hong Kong as a window between China and the West, Communist efforts to control public opinion in the media, and the pioneering role of Pearl S. Buck in interpreting China for American readers. The concluding section, "Issues," examines important stories now emerging in China that will matter to both journalists and China watchers, including the changing roles of Chinese women, little-covered instances of ethnic unrest, and the complexities of economic and environmental stories.The variety of points of view expressed in Covering China is a testament to the vigor of contemporary writing on China. As one contributor notes, American media coverage of China needs to challenge existing assumptions and be ready for the unexpected. By doing so, journalists can minimize the sense of shock that erupts in America at each swing of Chinese history. Covering China will be of interest to China area specialists, journalists, and cultural historians.Robert W. Snyder is managing editor of the Media Studies Journal, a historian, and author of Transit Talk: New York's Bus and Subway Workers Tell Their Stories. He has taught at Princeton University and New York University.

part 1|40 pages

Histories

chapter 1|6 pages

Echoes of the May 4th Movement

Defenders of communist orthodoxy and democracy activists both lay claim to a Chinese movement of 1919.

chapter 2|8 pages

The “Romantic” Generation

The old China hands left a legacy that helps and hurts American journalism.

chapter 3|10 pages

Covering the Chinese Civil War

Lessons that echoed from Nanking to Saigon

chapter 4|8 pages

China from Here and There

More than two decades of closed borders and narrowed vision

chapter 5|6 pages

Chinese Media in Flux

From Party line to bottom line

part 2|58 pages

Communicating

chapter 6|8 pages

Pearl S. Buck

For two generations of Americans, as an author and journalist. Buck invented China.
Edited ByPeter Conn

chapter 7|12 pages

Beyond the Square

Media treatment of China after Tiananmen

chapter 8|10 pages

Presidential and Scandalous

Portraits of the United States in the Chinese media

chapter 9|4 pages

Guiding Public Opinion

Controls and restrictions are embedded in soft-laced words.
Edited ByDai Qing

chapter 10|8 pages

Hong Kong

Still a window between China and the West
Edited ByYing Chan

chapter 11|14 pages

Learning and Teaching

Understand the forces of past and present and speak clearly, even when the costs are high.

part 3|34 pages

Issues

chapter 12|6 pages

Framing China

A complex country cannot be explained with simplistic formulas.
Edited ByJames Mann

chapter 13|6 pages

Charting New Terrain

“Half the sky already has collapsed on women.”
Edited ByJennifer Lin

chapter 14|6 pages

An Enormously Difficult Task

Covering business in China means trying to get hard data in a country not known for statistical reliability.

chapter 15|8 pages

Uncovering Three Gorges Dam

North American coverage of Chinese environmental issues
Edited ByWu Mei

chapter 16|6 pages

On the Border of Visibility

Western media and the Uyghur minority

part |12 pages

Review Essay

chapter 17|10 pages

From Admiration to Confrontation

Six decades of American reporting about China