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Chang Nai-ch'i and his critics : the interpretation of the Hundred Flowers MovementSmith, John M January 1978 (has links)
This thesis is an attempt to examine interpretations of the
May-June Hundred Flowers Movement in China in 1957 through
the examination of a principal participant among businessmen:
Chang Nai-ch'i.
The Hundred Flowers Movement is comprised of a series of violent
outbursts and extreme statements. The May-June Hundred Flowers
Movement was the last act in what might be termed China's
Hundred Flowers Period, a period of intellectual liberation
concurrent with the "Liberalization" in the Soviet Union.
China, like many other socialist states, is a closed society
from which information is often difficult to gather. The
criticism, as printed in Chinese newspapers and journals, provides
detailed information on factional struggles and organizational
difficulties found within the Chinese government. The criticism,
though often bountiful in number, is short, emotional and takes
the form of a vignette. The existence of a source of official
criticisms against Chang Nai-ch'i allows for the examination
of the actions of a leading Hundred Flowers participant both
prior to, and during the Movement.
The method used to examine, compile and evaluate criticisms
of Chang Nai-ch'i is the frequency chart in which quantitative
examination is made of various critics' statements, and the
duration of these statements. Through the use of this technique,
over forty criticisms of Chang Nai-ch'i found in two Chinese
language businessmen's journals are ordered, placed into chronological
sequence and evaluated. These criticisms are then
examined against existing information, and in particular, Chinese
journal and newspaper accounts to examine their significance
and validity.
The thesis is divided into three chapters examining three chronological
groups of criticisms. The first chapter examines
criticisms referring to Chang's past (1927-1951), the second
examines criticisms of events immediately prior to the Hundred
Flowers Movement (1952-1956) and the third examines criticisms
pertaining directly to the Hundred Flowers Movement.
Existing interpretations of the Hundred Flowers Movement stress
the spontaneity of the Movement, the importance of factional
differences within the Chinese leadership, and the importance
of the emergence of "disturbances" beyond the expectations of
the Chinese leadership. An examination of the criticisms of
Chang Nai-Ch'i suggests that the Hundred Flowers Movement was
not in any sense spontaneous, and that the "disturbances"
which led to an about-face by the Chinese leadership, may have
been a product of weaknesses within the Chinese political process,
weaknesses that were both factional and historical in nature. / Arts, Faculty of / History, Department of / Graduate
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Reconsidering the media public sphere: a study of radio phone-in programs in Hong Kong.January 2002 (has links)
Adelaide Nga-yan Lau. / Thesis submitted in: December 2001. / Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2002. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 152-158). / Abstracts in English and Chinese. / Introduction --- p.p. 1 -4 / Theoretical Framework --- p.p.5-25 / The Habermasian public sphere / Chapter ■ --- Universal access / Chapter ■ --- Topics of public concern / Chapter ■ --- Rational discussion / Gatekeeping in production / Chapter ■ --- Individual gatekeeping / Chapter ■ --- Organizational gatekeeping / Chapter ■ --- Impact of commercialization / Phone-in Programs as Media Public Spheres --- p.p.26-46 / Factors for developing public sphere / Chapter ■ --- Capitalism / Chapter ■ --- Freedom of expression / Media and political communication in Hong Kong / Political and social contexts of radio phone-in programs / Chapter ■ --- Period of germination / Chapter ■ --- Period of recognition / Chapter ■ --- Period of flourishing / Three radio phone-in programs in Hong Kong / Chapter ■ --- RTHK's Talkabout / Chapter ■ --- Commercial Radio's Teacup in a Storm / Chapter ■ --- Metro Radio's Metropolitics / Methodology --- p.p.47-55 / Data collection / Chapter ■ --- The Robert Chung case / Data analysis / Chapter ■ --- Content analysis / Chapter ■ --- Discourse analysis / Analysis I - Universal Access --- p.p.56-76 / Technologies enhance accessibility / Equal opportunity for callers / Selecting calls / Chapter ■ --- Screening in Talkabout / Chapter ■ --- Screening in Teacup in a Storm / Chapter ■ --- Screening in Metropolitics / What is universal access? / Analysis II - Topics of Public Concern --- p.p.77-96 / Topics initiated by the public / Handling of topics initiated by the public / Characteristics of pre-set discussion topics / Chapter ■ --- Characteristics of discussion topics in Talkabout / Chapter ■ --- Characteristics of discussion topics in Teacup in a Storm / Chapter ■ --- Characteristics of discussion topics in Metropolitics / Who sets the media agenda? / Analysis III - Rational Discussion --- p.P. 97 -114 / Opinions with grounds / Discourse analysis of discussion on the Robert Chung case / Chapter ■ --- Period of reticence / Chapter ■ --- Period of development / Chapter ■ --- Period of investigation / Chapter ■ --- Period of conclusion / What is rational discussion? / Conclusion and Discussion --- p.P.115-128 / Interpretations of three main criteria in the media public sphere / Organizational gatekeeping in the media public sphere / Chapter ■ --- Political economy of Talkabout / Chapter ■ --- Political economy of Teacup in a Storm / Chapter ■ --- Political economy of Metropolitics / One additional criterion 一 Pluralism / Reconsidering the media public sphere / Appendices --- p.P.129-151 / Bibliography --- p.P.152-158
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