China Media Centre 2012 Spring Seminar 4

China Media Centre 2012 Spring Seminar

Photojournalism in China 

Speaker:  AN Guanxi,   XIANG Mei

Date: Thursday, 29th March 2012

Time: 11am-1pm

Venue: A 7.3

Chair: Guo Dawei

OPEN TO ALL

 

Mr. AN Guanxi is now a Visiting Scholar at the China Media Centre, University of Westminster. He also joined University Missouri in the US in 2010 as a visiting scholar. Mr. An was the director of Photo Department in Oriental Morning Post based in Shanghai for more than 5 years. He obtained his Master degree from the first Master Course organized for Chinese photojournalists to learn digital media in 2008.

In this seminar, Mr. An will introduce photojournalism in China; the requirements of photojournalists, agenda setting and kop cialis generisk online the trend of photojournalism.

 

Mrs. XIANG Mei has rich experience working for the Olympic games as media operator. Before join Xinhua News Agency as photojournalist and editor in 2009, she worked for the Beijing Organizing Committee for the Games of 29th Olympiad as a project manager in Photo Services of Media Operations. In 2011, Mrs. XIANG moved to London. She is now studying Media Management at University of Westminster, while working for Xinhua News agency’s London bureau as well as working for 2012 London Olympic as media operator.

She will talk through her experiences as a photojournalist, editor and media operator during big events.

 

More about China Media Centre and seminars see https://chinamediacentre.org/

If you have any inquiry about CMC events, please contact Miao Mi at m.mi@my.westminster.ac.uk

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China Media Centre 2012 Spring Seminar Series 2

‘EVERYTHING DEPENDS ON LOVE’:

CHINESE CHRISTIANITY AND THE PARTY

Speaker: Dr GerdaWielander
Date: Monday 5th March
Time: 2-4pm
Venue: A 6.8 Maria Hewlett Building (A Block) Harrow Campus
Chair: Prof Hugo de Burgh
OPEN TO ALL

This talk asks the question what influence Christian values have had on social and political values in post-socialist China. Christianity, understood as an ideological source of social and political values, informs both official ideology and ‘dissident’ ideology, albeit in different ways and to a different extent, and is an increasingly accepted source of social moral and free cialis brand sample pack ethics in contemporary China. I argue that while we tend to think of China as an atheist, secular state, it is in fact vital to understand the importance religion plays in the state’s response to emerging new values in society without giving ground in terms of a more democratic system.

Biography:

Gerda Wielander’s research interest lies in contemporary China’s social and political development. Most recently she has been interested in the way Christian belief is influencing and shaping political discourse in contemporary China. She has published several articles in this field and has been awarded an AHRC Fellowship in 2012 to complete her book on Christian values in Communist China (to be published with Routledge in 2013).

GerdaWielander was educated in Vienna and Beijing. She obtained an M.A. in Chinese Studies in 1990 with a dissertation on Liang Qichao’s historiography, including a first translation into German of Liang’s “XinShixue” (New Historiography). Her PhD (1995) investigated the Malaysian Chinese evaluation of China’s Democracy Movement (1976-1989) as expressed in the region’s vibrant Chinese press.

Gerda is Principal Lecturer in Chinese Studies and Director of the Undergraduate Languages Programme in the School of Social Sciences, Humanities and Languages. She has taught at a number of British universities including SOAS and Cambridge before coming to Westminster in a full-time capacity.

More about China Media Centre and seminars see https://chinamediacentre.org.

If you have any queries about CMC events, please contact Miao Mi at m.mi@my.westminster.ac.uk

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SOAS&CMC Spring Seminar:

The next China Media Centre seminar will take place on Wednesday 22rd February between 4-6pm at Westminster University’s New Cavendish Campus, in room C1.04.

Prof Michel Hockx from SOAS, University of London, Dr. Mei Hong, Assistant Professor from Southwest Jiaotong University and Prof David Gauntlett from University of Westminster, will give a talk with the title ‘China: the New Media Explosion’, You can find more details about the speakers and cialis tadalafil 20 mg an abstract of the talk below.

SOAS& CMC 2012 Spring Seminar

CHINA: THE NEW MEDIA EXPLOSION


Speaker: Prof Michel Hockx, Dr. Mei Hong

Interrogator: Prof David Gauntlett

Date: Wednesday 22nd February, 2012

Time: 4-6pm

Venue: C1.04 New Cavendish Campus, University of Westminster,

Chair: Prof Hugo de Burgh

OPEN TO ALL


ABSTRACT:
This lecture introduces the history, development, and widespread popularity of Internet Literature (wangluo wenxue 网络文学) in the People’s Republic of China. The speakers will deal in turn deal with two discrete aspects of the phenomenon, namely the rise of online popular fiction and its impact on other media, and the significance of online practices for the more marginal genre of poetry.

BIOGRAPHY:
Michel Hockx is Professor of Chinese at SOAS, University of London. Born and raised in The Netherlands, he obtained his PhD in 1994 from Leiden University for a thesis on modern Chinese poetry. His later work has dealt with various aspects of the sociology of modern Chinese literature, including the study of early modern literary societies and literary magazines and, more recently, the study of Internet literature. His monograph Internet Literature in China is forthcoming with Columbia University Press.

David Gauntlett is Professor of Media and Communications, and Co-Director of the Communications and Media Research Institute, at the University of Westminster. His teaching and research concerns people’s use of media in their everyday lives, with a particular focus on creative uses of digital media. He is the author of several books, including Creative Explorations (2007) and Making is Connecting: The social meaning of creativity, from DIY and knitting to YouTube and priligy approved pharmacy Web 2.0 (2011). He has made several popular YouTube videos, and produces the website about media and identities, Theory.org.uk. He has conducted collaborative research with a number of the world’s leading creative organisations, including the BBC, Lego, and Tate.

Mei Hong is a vice professor of Communication Department of Art and Communication College, Southwest Jiaotong University, China. She obtained her PHD in 2006 from Sichuan University for a thesis on Culture and Communication. She is interested in media and society and has published a book on Internet Literature.

 

 

More about China Media Centre and seminars wee: https://chinamediacentre.org/

If you have any queries about CMC events, please contact Miao MI at m.mi@my.westminster.ac.uk

 

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Media Digest, January 26-February 17, 2010

China Media Digest 1001 (26Jan-18Feb)

EDITOR: Jackie Fang YIN

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Headlines

  • Former BBC anchor starts work at CRI
  • More publications during 2010 Expo
  • Probe traces Google attacks to 2 Chinese schools: report
  • China sets limit on Spring Festival SMS
  • Common sense, rationality needed for society: CCTV host
  • Jackie Chan launches cinema chain

Former BBC anchor starts work at CRI

FORMER BBC anchor Susan Osman began hosting a breakfast show for China Radio International (CRI) yesterday, Chinese-language media reported yesterday. It was Osman’s first time hosting “The Beijing Hour,” a new current affairs program. Osman signed a one-year contract with the CRI to host the prime-time breakfast show.

Osman, 51, moved to China to escape the ingrained “culture of ageism” in Britain’s broadcasting industry, previous reports said. She has worked in broadcasting for 28 years, presenting bulletins on BBC World and reporting for ITN News before falling out of favor with her bosses, with one even remarking to her, “Are you menopausal?” Of this experience, Osman said: “This is quite typical. I’ve had so many female colleagues who have dropped out in their early 40s, which is a shame because an older woman can bring wisdom and empathy. There don’t seem to be many places for older women in broadcasting in this country [the U.K.].”“Ironically, when I started working in television, I was always afraid of not being taken seriously for being young. The truth is when you’re not getting any younger, it becomes even worse,” she added.

In response to Osman’s comments, a BBC spokesman said: “Broadcasting, especially presenting, is an extremely competitive industry and the nature of it is such that many broadcasters are freelance artists on contracts of specific durations. Ageism has nothing to do with it.”

Osman’s son, who graduated from Oxford, came to China last year and advised his mother to make the move. “In China they revere experience,” she said. “The older you are the better. I got the impression that my future boss actually wanted me to be older when I finally told him my age during the interview. He hopes I could help in training young reporters.” ( Shenzhen Daily 2010-1-26 )

More publications during 2010 Expo

German newspapers like Bild and racy Italian magazines may be available in Shanghai this summer as Expo organizers consider lifting the curbs on foreign publications during the six-month-long cultural gala. Scores of the 192 countries that will join the Expo have already given their tacit backing to the lifting of the ban as they aim to promote their respective pavilions or culture through their national media, which they would like to see on sale in the host city.

Their response came after Zhu Yonglei, deputy director-general with the Bureau of Shanghai World Expo Coordination, said last month that proposals would be sent out soon to gauge the level of interest from participating countries and Expo tourists. “We would appreciate it very much if all materials related to the activity of the Italian pavilion could be available to Chinese, international and Italian visitors in Shanghai,” the country’s Expo team told China Daily. “We are confident that the Expo bureau will identify the appropriate solution.”

A similar easing of restrictions took place in Beijing during the 2008 Olympics, when 100 overseas publications hit news kiosks located in areas catering to athletes and international media covering the Games in the Chinese capital.

Germany, which hosted the 2000 Hanover Expo, is looking to import its newspapers after seeing the positive response to hand out free copies of the FAZ (Frankfurt General Newspaper) during the 2005 Aichi Expo in Japan. Dietmar Schmitz, Germany’s commissioner general to the 2010 Expo, said he hopes to do the same this year. “Germany is very much satisfied with the preparatory work for Expo 2010 and we look back on a very fruitful cooperation with our partners from the Expo bureau,” he said. “I am very much confident that in this matter the Expo organizers will also find a satisfying solution.” ( China Daily 08-02-2010 )

Probe traces Google attacks to 2 Chinese schools: report

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Recent cyber attacks on Google and other American corporations have been traced to a top Chinese university as well as a school with ties to the Chinese military, the New York Times reported on Thursday, citing people involved in the investigation. Those people told the Times that the Chinese schools involved are Shanghai Jiaotong University and the Lanxiang Vocational School. They said the attacks may have started as early as April 2009 — earlier than previously thought.

According to the report, investigators believe there is evidence suggesting a link to a computer science class at the vocational school taught by a Ukrainian professor. Google jolted U.S.-China ties with its January 12 announcement that it had faced a “highly sophisticated and targeted attack” in mid-December, allegedly from inside China. More than 20 other companies were also targeted, though Google said a primary target was dissidents’ email accounts. Jill Hazelbaker, Google’s director of corporate communications said that the company’s investigation is ongoing, but otherwise declined to comment. The Chinese schools were not immediately available for comment, but the Times said they had not heard that American investigators had traced the Google attacks to their campuses. (Reuters.com 18-02-2010)

China sets limit on Spring Festival SMS

Mobile users restricted to 500 messages an hour in crackdown. Mobile phone users in China will need to limit the number of Chinese New Year text messages they send during Spring Festival as part of a crackdown on spam messages.

An agreement among the country’s three main mobile network operators last June stipulates that if the number of messages sent from a phone number reaches 200 within an hour or 1,000 within a day, the phone’s message service will be suspended for a week.For holidays and weekends, the allowable limit will increase to 500 hourly and 2,000 every day, it said. Wei Leping, chief-engineer from China Telecom told China Daily yesterday that even during Spring Festival, the crackdown on spam messages will continue. “Even though such strict measures to fight against junk messages are taken, many people still receive tens of such messages,” Wei said.

Mobile phone subscribers received about 10 spam messages every week by the end of 2008, which means more than 300 million unwanted messages were delivered that year, according to statistics from the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology. The most common type of spam includes promotions for real estate, retail, traffic and tourism industries.

Considering the harm of spam messages, some phone users support the limitation on message numbers. Sun Qian, a postgraduate at Liaoning Normal University, said it was a good service.” A normal person rarely sends more than 100 messages within an hour even during holidays, unless he or she is a spammer or a cheater,” Sun said.

Official figures show Chinese mobile phone users sent 18 billion text messages during last year’s 7-day Spring Festival holiday, and the figure is expected to increase this year. Wei said operators did not have the right to read short messages and decide which was junk and which was not. There were about 700 million mobile users on the Chinese mainland as of July last year.( China Daily 01-02-2010 )

Common sense, rationality needed for society: CCTV host

Chinese society needs to show respect to common sense, think rationally in government administration, including pursuing its democracy model, and search for beliefs amidst the rapid economic growth, said Bai Yansong, China’s leading television host, in an interview with the Beijing News.

In a commentary published on Saturday Feb. 2, the acclaimed anchorman said that there was a time when Chinese people’s common sense was distorted by politics or manipulated by some people’s interests. Bai criticized that during the Cultural Revolution people exaggerated that millions of kilograms of grains were produced on a very small piece of farmland in a single year, with many people believing the ridiculous numbers.

Even today people’s common sense may be still affected by unethical media reports due to economic interests. A so-called medical expert preached his “healthy diet”, implying that many types of traditional foods that Chinese people have lived on for thousands of years were harmful. No media stood out to question him and finally it turned out that he was misleading the public and distorting people’s common senses to benefit himself. Although the expert was eventually sentenced for his crime, the case made people worry that economic interests were challenging people’s common senses, Bai said.

To construct rational thinking is also important for the Chinese government as well as the whole society. The Communist Party of China has changed from a revolutionary party into a governing party, assuming the role of serving the whole society that includes people it likes and hates, which requires the party to act very rationally, Bai said.

Rationality, Bai said, should also be an important characteristic of people living in this large country.

He said a lot of things were sensitive in the past and people were confused about what to say and what not to say. Last year CCTV broadcast Premier Wen Jiabao being attacked by shoes when giving a lecture, which was considered a very sensitive thing but nothing happened, he said.

The power of sensitivity is strong and will grow even stronger when you think it is sensitive, but when you treat it brightly or even ignore it, it will just die out, according to Bai.

In regard with the government’s role in constructing rationality, Bai said the government’s rationality depends on the shift of governing the country by people to governing it by law.(chinadaily.com.cn 08-02-2010)

Jackie Chan launches cinema chain

International movie star Jackie Chan has taken on another role in the film industry: boss of a movie theater chain.

The first Jackie Chan – Yaolai International Cinema, co-funded by the kung fu star and Hong Kong-based Sparkle Roll Group Limited, started trial operations in west Beijing on Monday with a private screening of Chan’s new comedy “Little Big Soldiers.” With 17 screens and 3,500 seats, the venue covers 15,000 square meters and claims to be the largest movie theatre in the country.

Five halls in the cinema provide free hearing-aid equipment for those in need, Jackie Chan said.

The actor said he hopes the venue will also offer screens for non-commercial films and productions by young directors. Fifteen Jackie Chan cinemas are expected to open in Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou this year. ( CRIENGLISH.com 09-02-2010 )

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Recent and Forthcoming Courses at China Media Centre

RECENT AND FORTHCOMING COURSES AT CMC

China Media Centre has designed a suite of courses which are especially, though not exclusively, designed for Chinese applicants.

This year we have held two separate sessions of our course ‘INNOVATION AND CREATIVITY IN THE UK MEDIA’ and two of ‘CITY BRANDING AND INTERNATIONAL COMMUNICATIONS’. They are aimed at mid-career professionals in, respectively, the broadcast industry and the public spokesperson track within regional and city government administrations.

 clip_image003Certificate ceremony March 2010; CMC INNOVATION2 coursE

 Each course includes a few days out with London; in Scotland, a programme introducing the visitors to Scottish public affairs has been hosted several times by John Brown, the PR expert who is brother to the recent Prime Minister. One of the courses for government officials visited Northern Ireland and the next one will be briefed in Cardiff on Welsh devolution.

BCG_77Certificate ceremony March 2010; CMC CITY1 course; Ms WANG Hui, Director of Information Office of Beijing Municipality, receiving the certificate from Geoffrey Davies, Head of the Department for Journalism and Mass Communications, and Prof Hugo de Burgh, Director of China Media Centre.

 We are also recruiting to 3 summer schools for Chinese media undergraduates in July and August; applications received so far come from students at universities as diverse as Shandong University (where the Director is an Honorary Professor), Renmin University, Communications University, Guangzhou University of Foreign Studies and Shenzhen University.

Also planned for this year is a course ‘THE ORGANISATION AND SKILLS OF UK PUBLIC COMMUNICATION ‘, aimed at national level media specialists, and indications so far are that it will be attended by high ranking civil servants and the heads of public affairs of some of China’s largest state-owned corporations.

ACADEMIC CONFERENCE

In April 2010, CMC also held its annual academic conference at Regent Campus, this year titled CHINA’S SOFT POWER. Delegates attending from all continents engaged keenly with the topics under discussion.

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 The dramatic economic growth in China has meant a renewed international influence. President Obama’s recent visit, and the effective establishment of the “G2,” marked international recognition of the fact that China is, today, a central actor in the world economy. Historically, economic power has always been accompanied by increasing international cultural influence – soccer, Hollywood and karaoke are just some of the things bequeathed by other big economies to the rest of the world. It is certain that China’s economic stature will also be reflected in the diffusion of Chinese culture.

This reality is already recognised by many in China and outside. The Chinese government has a “going out” strategy, aiming to make the Chinese language, Chinese culture, and the Chinese media more visible internationally. At the same time, broadcasters who were once content to buy programmes and copy western models are today planning to enter the international market place as sellers of their own products.

 

TEACHING THE MEDIA-a course at Chongqing’s XINAN UNIVERSITY OF POLICY & LAW

Geoffrey Davies, Head of Department of JMC, will lead a delegation of 4 lecturers to address media teachers from all over SW China in workshops to be held in early July. Prof Jeanette Steemers is a world expert on children’s’ television, David Dunkley Gyimah a specialist on New Media and Anthony McNicholas, who runs the BBC-History discussion list and is a specialist on Media and Communications.

LECTURE

The Director gave the opening address at a conference at Wolfson College Oxford on 10-11 June, AFRICA, CHINA AND THE WEST MEET: TOWARDS NEW FRAMEWORKS FOR MEDIA DEVELOPMENT. Among the very scholars from many countries giving papers were UW colleagues Dr Xin Xin and Dr Winston Mano.

Prof Hugo de Burgh will give a keynote speech at the 11th All-China Communications Conference, to be held at Peking University 9-12 July.

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