This book engages with the Chinese mediation of wars and conflicts in
the global environment.Proposing a new cascading media and conflict
model, it applies this to the studyof war correspondents from six
levels: media-policy relations, journalistic objectivity,
roleperceptions, news framing and peace/war journalism, news practices,
and audience.
Based on interviews with 23 Chinese journalists and case study analysis
of the Libyan War, Syrian War, Afghanistan War and Israeli-Palestinian
conflict, the book demonstrates thata new breed of Chinese war
correspondents has emerged today. They undergo a complexand nuanced
mediated communication process. Neither traditionally Chinese in
theirapproach nor western in their perceptions, they are uniquely
pragmatic in negotiating theirroles in a complex web of internal and
external actors and factors. The core ideology seemsto be anti-West in
defiance of the US hegemony and the bias of global media as well
asneutral-Muslims.
Exploring the role perceptions, values, norms and practices of
contemporary Chinese warcorrespondents who go outside China to bring the
'distant culture' back home, this text is keyreading for scholars and
students in international journalism, international communication, war
and peace studies, international relations and Chinese studies.