In some ways, the latest deluge of rhetoric from the Party feels timeless. Ever since Mao's famous speech in Yan'an on literature and art in 1942, the CCP has made clear that culture ought to serve politics. But there's also something new about the renewed focus on culture, whether in the resurgent confidence in the Party's top ranks that digital media can be sculpted, or in the amazing willingness of the top-level elite to pour billions into expanding China's global media presence.

This week on Sinica, join host Kaiser Kuo and Sinica regulars Jeremy Goldkorn and David Moser for a wide-ranging discussion about recent changes in the Chinese media landscape. Also in our studio is Adrienne Mong, the Beijing correspondent for NBC News, who joins us with first-hand stories of how China's push for better global press is affecting not only the domestic news but also international perceptions of China, whether through the flood of Chinese journalists who now routinely cover international events, or perhaps through rising Chinese ambitions in the English language news sphere and the increasing challenges foreign journalists have getting credentialed to report the news in China legally.

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 said on
November 21, 2011
What was the word used to mean "discourse" mentioned by David Moser?
 said on
November 22, 2011
@zjv5002 I think that must be 话言权.
 said on
November 22, 2011
Very interesting, thank you! The mention of the 三俗 (I hope I got the correct characters for that) is something I have not heard of before - is there any english language writing about these which you could point me towards? (My chinese is not good enough to read anything except basic conversations yet!)

Thanks guys
 said on
November 22, 2011
@wibbleypig2003 -- The Economist had a pretty good article about the campaign a while ago at http://www.economist.com/node/16793041, and Global Voices Online gives a nice introduction to some of the thinking behind it at http://advocacy.globalvoicesonline.org/2010/08/10/china-anti-three-vulgarities-campaign/. More recently, the Global Times covered last month's Forum on No More Fun (or whatever the official name was) at http://www.globaltimes.cn/NEWS/tabid/99/ID/679510/Culture-to-lead-tough-reforms.aspx.
 said on
November 22, 2011
@gnotella100 Thanks for the help.
 said on
June 2, 2013
One of the best discussions yet on Sinica.
Mark Lesson Studied