The press of the People's Republic of China : history, function, operational and organisational patterns up to 1965

1968 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christa Tisdall
2019 ◽  
Vol 37 (2) ◽  
pp. 56-86 ◽  
Author(s):  
Catherine E. Clark

This article looks at two seemingly disparate events: Georges Pompidou’s 1973 presidential visit to the People’s Republic of China (PRC) and the filming and release of Jean Yanne’s blockbuster comedy Les Chinois à Paris (1974). Both produced flawed visions of Franco-Chinese relations. During Pompidou’s visit, officials and the press attempted to demonstrate that France enjoyed warmer relations with the PRC than any other Western nation. Yanne’s film parodied the French fad for Maoism by imagining the People’s Liberation Army invading and occupying Paris. His film caused an uproar in the press and sparked official Chinese protest. The article ultimately argues that the two events were deeply related, part of a wave of popular and official interest in China in the early 1970s that extended well beyond the well-known stories of student and intellectual Maoists. This interest paved the way for Franco-Chinese relations as we know them today.


2001 ◽  
Vol 3 (4) ◽  
pp. 190-226
Author(s):  
Anne S.Y. Cheung

This monograph is a study of press law in Hong Kong after sovereignty retrocession to the People's Republic of China. It asks why has the unprecedented constitutional commitment for press freedom after the handover failed to translate into practical guarantees in the legal arena? Reasons that may be accounted for are two. First, Hong Kong law is marked by inconsistent legislations. Second, this inconsistency leads to a heavy reliance on executive restraint and judicial enforcement to protect the press. Most disturbing is the constant denial and disregard of the role and value of the press by the judiciary. This monograph further contends that in marking the boundary for the exercise of press freedom, the judiciary is also defining the triadic relationship among the authorities, the press and the citizens. This monograph concludes that unless there is a profound judicial awakening, Hong Kong's press freedom as a legal right will remain illusionary and empty.


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