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Civic Discourse, Civil Society, and Chinese Communities
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Randy Kluver, John H. Powers, ed.
ISBN: 1-56750-442-6
ISBN-13: 978-1-56750-442-2
0 pages
Praeger Publishers
Publication: 11/10/1999
List Price: $131.95 (UK Sterling Price: £91.95)
Availability: In Stock
Media Type: Hardcover
Also Available: Paperback
Trim Size: 6 x 9
Subjects: Awards:
  • IICD Outstanding Scholarship Award
Description: The purpose of this volume is to bring together a set of chapters that investigate the communication practices through which Chinese societies are creating their civil foundations for the next millennium. Civic Discourse, Civil Society, and Chinese Communities, reflects both the emphasis on analyzing specific discursive practices in particular Chinese societies and on understanding the role that discursive practices play in the development of civil society more generally.
Table of Contents:
  • Preface
    Introduction: Civic Discourse and Civil Society in Chinese Communities, John H. Powers and Randy Kluver
    Part I: Civic Discourse and National Identity
    Elite-Based Discourse in Chinese Civil Society, Randy Kluver
    Journalistic Memoirs of China: The Discourse of Foreign Reporters, John H. Powers
    Part II: Emerging Patterns of Discourse in Chinese Civil Societies
    The Role of Rhetorical Topoi in Constructing the Social Fabric of Contemporary China, George Q. Xu
    Freedom of Religion in China: The Emerging Civic Discourse, Brent Fulton
    From Kaihui to Duihua: The Transformation of Chinese Civic Discourse, Wenshan Jia
    Ineffability and Violence in Taiwan's Congress, Jensen Chung
    Ideological Themes in Hong Kong's Public Service Announcements: Implications for China's Future, Lisa Cuklanz and Wendy Wong
    Part III: Modes of Civic Discourse in Chinese Communities
    From Lei Feng to Zhang Haidi: Changing Media Images of Model Youth in the Post-Mao Reform Era, Mei Zhang
    Televisual Discourse and the Mediation of Power: Living Room Dialogues with Modernity in Reform-Era China, William C. Godby
    Literature as Civic Discourse in the Reform Era: Utopianism and Cynicism in Chinese Political Consciousness, Shiping Hua
    Same Language, Yet Different: News Coverage of Clinton's China Visit by Two Prominent Newspapers, Mei Zhong
    (Re)locating Our Voices in the Public Sphere: Call-in Talk Shows as a Channel for Civic Discourse in Taiwan, Rueyling Chuang and Ringo Ma
    Kan Dashan as Civic Discourse in a Chinese Community, Shuming Lu
    The Internet as a Mode of Civic Discourse: The Chinese Virtual Community in North America, Dejun Liu
    Part IV: Civic Discourse Between China and the World
    The Pride of Zuguo: China's Perennial Appeal to the Overseas Chinese and an Emergent Civic Discourse in a Global Community, Dilin Liu and Canchu Lin
    China's Rhetoric of Socialization in its International Civic Discourse, D. Ray Heisey
    Civic Discourse with the International Community: China's Whitepapers on Human Rights, John H. Powers
    Rhetorical Adaptability in China's Argument for Most Favored Nation Status, Heping Zhao
    Civic Discourse in China-U.S. Relations: Great Leaps Forward and Backward, Mei-ling T. Wang
    Author Index
    Subject Index
    About the Editors
    About the Contributors
About the Author: RANDY KLUVER is Associate Professor on Speech and Rhetoric and Director of the interdisciplinary Asian Studies Program at Oklahoma City University. /e His research focuses primarily on 20th century Asian political discourse and its cultural roots. He is also interested in global political, economic, and cultural trends, in an attempt to understand the world we will inhabit in the future.

JOHN H. POWERS is Associate Professor of Communication Studies at Hong Kong Baptist University, where he has been for the past eight years. /e Previous to his current position, he taught at Texas A&M University for 16 years. His research interests include communication theory and paradigm building, public discourse theory and criticism, and the role of language in routine communication practices. He is author of &IPublic Speaking: The Lively Art (1994).
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