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Two Billion Eyes
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Barnes and Noble
Two Billion Eyes
Current price: $18.95
Barnes and Noble
Two Billion Eyes
Current price: $18.95
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“Up until
Two Billion Eyes
,” wrote the
Los Angeles Review of Books
, “the view of Chinese media has often been limited…[Ying] Zhu expands the periphery of our vision.” Acclaimed in hardcover by experts on China, Zhu's brilliant dissection of China Central television (CCTV) is the first book to look at the dynamic modern media conglomerate and official mouthpiece of the Chinese Communist Party, with an audience of over 1.2 billion viewers globally, including millions in the United States. With “cogent analysis and penetrating insight” (
Publishers Weekly
),
tells the groundbreaking story of this hugely influential media player.
“A fascinating window into the emergence of a Chinese public sphere” (Fredric Jameson) and “an indispensable guide to the Chinese media landscape (
The New Inquiry
explores how commercial priorities and journalistic ethics have competed with the demands of state censorship and how Chinese audiences themselves have grown more critical. A “unique window” (
South China Morning Post
) into one of the world's most important corporations, this is a crucial new book for anyone seeking to understand contemporary China.
Two Billion Eyes
,” wrote the
Los Angeles Review of Books
, “the view of Chinese media has often been limited…[Ying] Zhu expands the periphery of our vision.” Acclaimed in hardcover by experts on China, Zhu's brilliant dissection of China Central television (CCTV) is the first book to look at the dynamic modern media conglomerate and official mouthpiece of the Chinese Communist Party, with an audience of over 1.2 billion viewers globally, including millions in the United States. With “cogent analysis and penetrating insight” (
Publishers Weekly
),
tells the groundbreaking story of this hugely influential media player.
“A fascinating window into the emergence of a Chinese public sphere” (Fredric Jameson) and “an indispensable guide to the Chinese media landscape (
The New Inquiry
explores how commercial priorities and journalistic ethics have competed with the demands of state censorship and how Chinese audiences themselves have grown more critical. A “unique window” (
South China Morning Post
) into one of the world's most important corporations, this is a crucial new book for anyone seeking to understand contemporary China.