ABSTRACT

Offering an entirely new approach to understanding China’s journalism history, this book covers the Chinese periodical press in the first half of the twentieth century.

By focusing on five cases, either occurring in or in relation to the year 1917, this book emphasizes the protean nature of the newspaper and seeks to challenge a press historiography which suggests modern Chinese newspapers were produced and consumed with clear agendas of popularizing enlightenment, modernist, and revolutionary concepts. Instead, this book contends that such a historiography, which is premised on the classification of newspapers along the lines of their functions, overlooks the opaqueness of the Chinese press in the early twentieth century.

Analyzing modern Chinese history through the lens of the newspaper, this book presents an interdisciplinary and international approach to studying mass communications. As such, this book will be useful to students and scholars of Chinese history, journalism, and Asian Studies more generally.

chapter |49 pages

Introduction

part I|1 pages

1917

chapter 1|44 pages

Between literati and journalists

53Hu Zhengzhi and Dagong bao in the late 1920S

part II|2 pages

1917

chapter 2|37 pages

From Missouri to Shanghai

Maurice E. Votaw and the transplantation of American journalism education to China in the Republican times

chapter 3|41 pages

Between liberalism and censorship

Ma Xingye and the Central Daily News, the 1920s–1940s

part III|1 pages

1917

chapter 4|43 pages

The birth of a republic

179The 1917 courtesan election and the rise of a public sphere in the Xiaobao press

chapter 5|41 pages

The murder of Lianying

News, news network, and modernity in 1920s Shanghai

chapter |9 pages

Afterword

From the use of the newspaper to the use of the Internet