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A Collective Push for Marketization: The Emergence of Critical Reporting and Journalistic Independence in 1980s China

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posted on 2025-07-15, 14:09 authored by Zhemin Huang
Based on an analysis of 316 critical reports published in the 1980s by three Chinese newspapers operating at different administrative levels—supplemented by journalists’ memoirs and second-hand interviews—this study demonstrates that critical reporting reflected a field-level shift toward greater journalistic independence from state directives, even as it developed alongside state-led reforms and aligned with official marketization discourse. This study further explains how the New Enlightenment Movement and the Reform and Opening-Up—two parallel forces in the construction of a market society—contributed to the emergence and evolution of critical reporting. It argues that journalistic independence was not only facilitated by established market mechanisms, as previous research suggests, but also by the very process of market formation. The cultural idea that transformed individuals into market actors helped awaken journalists to their professional autonomy, while the collaboration between journalists and the state—essential to building a market system—created opportunities for that autonomy to develop.<p></p>

History

Date Created

2025-07-11

Publisher

University of Notre Dame

Date Modified

2025-07-14

Language

  • English

Additional Groups

  • Sociology

Library Record

6715879

Defense Date

2025-06-20

CIP Code

  • 45.1101

Research Director(s)

David Gibson

Committee Members

Lyn Spillman Terry McDonnell

Degree

  • Master of Arts

Degree Level

  • Master's Thesis

OCLC Number

1527823248

Program Name

  • Sociology

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