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Lingering Anti-Communism: Analysis of News Coverage of the 2007 China’s National People’s Congress in the New York Times and the Washington Post |
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Abstract:
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A commonplace assumption is that, following the fall of the Soviet Union and its Eastern bloc communist regimes, the anti-communism that once prevailed in United States media has diminished. Yet, as revealed in my analysis of New York Times and Washington Post news coverage of the 2007 China’s National People’s Congress, the counterthrust against communism is barely abating in the U.S.’s mainstream, national newspapers. This paper will provide an analysis of ideological themes recurring in both texts and photographs of the two major newspapers with the objective of understanding how they framed this prominent political event in China. I argue that, by defaming China, the anti-communism that accompanied the newspapers’ messages to an American public simultaneously alienated the Chinese public. |
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china (44), media (37), congress (36), law (35), stori (35), properti (28), peopl (26), new (26), york (26), time (25), npc (24), socialist (23), american (22), issu (22), privat (21), ideolog (21), newspap (19), two (19), countri (18), communist (17), also (17), |
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Association:
Name: NCA 94th Annual Convention URL: http://www.natcom.org
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Citation:
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MLA Citation:
| Guo, Jing. "Lingering Anti-Communism: Analysis of News Coverage of the 2007 China’s National People’s Congress in the New York Times and the Washington Post" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the NCA 94th Annual Convention, TBA, San Diego, CA, Nov 20, 2008 <Not Available>. 2010-03-11 <http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p257593_index.html> |
APA Citation:
| Guo, J. , 2008-11-20 "Lingering Anti-Communism: Analysis of News Coverage of the 2007 China’s National People’s Congress in the New York Times and the Washington Post" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the NCA 94th Annual Convention, TBA, San Diego, CA Online <PDF>. 2010-03-11 from http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p257593_index.html |
Publication Type: Conference Paper/Unpublished Manuscript Abstract: A commonplace assumption is that, following the fall of the Soviet Union and its Eastern bloc communist regimes, the anti-communism that once prevailed in United States media has diminished. Yet, as revealed in my analysis of New York Times and Washington Post news coverage of the 2007 China’s National People’s Congress, the counterthrust against communism is barely abating in the U.S.’s mainstream, national newspapers. This paper will provide an analysis of ideological themes recurring in both texts and photographs of the two major newspapers with the objective of understanding how they framed this prominent political event in China. I argue that, by defaming China, the anti-communism that accompanied the newspapers’ messages to an American public simultaneously alienated the Chinese public. |
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