1st Edition

Reporting China in Africa Media Discourses on Shifting Geopolitics

Edited By Herman Wasserman Copyright 2015
    178 Pages
    by Routledge

    178 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book discusses the growing media engagement between China and Africa from the point of view of both these regions. The rapid increase in Sino-African contact has led to many controversies and debates in the media, often represented in simplistic terms and stereotypes that call for more in-depth scholarly analysis. Not only have the relationship between Africa and China made headlines in the media, but the media itself has also become increasingly central in the exchanges of capital and human resources between these two regions. The media has also become the terrain where China’s new foreign policy takes shape in the form of ‘soft power’. This volume brings together authors from Africa, China, the US, UK and Europe to provide analysis, comment and empirical evidence to deepen our understanding of how the geopolitical shift towards the emerging regions of China and Africa are playing out on media terrain. The implications for transnational flows of media capital and content on journalistic approaches, press freedom and normative frameworks are discussed, as well as how African journalists have responded to these changes. The result is a collection of perspectives that refuses simplistic conclusions about what the growing engagement between China and Africa might mean, but presents a range of arguments informed by scholarly research.



    This book was originally published as a special issue of Ecquid Novi: African Journalism Studies.

    1. China in Africa: The implications for journalism Herman Wasserman  2. Cultural flows in the Chinese empire: The case of Africa Gabriël J. Botma  3. China as a persuader: CCTV Africa’s first steps in the African mediasphere Iginio Gagliardone  4. Contemporary Sino-African relations: Interpenetration of history of relations with the West, ideology and comparative media frames Anthony Olorunnisola and Lian Ma  5. Emerging trends and patterns in China–Africa media dynamics: A discussion from an East African perspective Bob Wekesa  6. How ready is China for a China-style world order? China’s state media discourse under construction Xiaoling Zhang  7. Half-orchestrated, half freestyle: Soft power and reporting Africa in China Shubo Li and Helge Rønning  8. Africa, the village belle: From crisis to opportunity Francis B. Nyamnjoh  9. Soft power, being attractive to others, and nation branding in an epoch where the Pax Americana sets the pace P. Eric Louw  10. China’s soft diplomacy in Africa Anton Harber  11. The Chinese in Africa/Africans in China Research Network: Reflections on the role of such networks in China–Africa reporting Yoon Jung Park  12. Tracking the effects of a ‘soft power’ strategy on journalism in China Alan Finlay

    Biography

    Herman Wasserman is Professor and (from 2015) Director of the Centre for Film and Media Studies, University of Cape Town, South Africa. He has published widely on media in post-apartheid South Africa and edits the journal Ecquid Novi: African Journalism Studies.