Monographie
Cadres and discourse in the People's Republic of China / Michael Schoenhals, Xiaolin Guo
Type de contenu
- Texte
Type de médiation
- sans médiation
Titre(s)
- Cadres and discourse in the People's Republic of China / Michael Schoenhals, Xiaolin Guo
Auteur(s)
Autre(s) auteur(s)
Autre(s) responsabilité(s)
Editeur, producteur
- Stockholm : Institute for security and development policy, cop. 2007
Description matérielle
- 1 vol. (60 p.) ; 25 cm
Collection
- Asia paper
ISBN
- 91-85473-41-3
- 978-91-85473-41-0
Appartient à la collection
- Asia paper
Classification décimale Dewey
- 302.240 951
- 320.014
Note sur la description bibliographique
- Consultable à l'adresse
Note sur la responsabilité
- "Sponsored by Utrikes Departementet (The Swedish Foreign Ministry)"
Note sur les bibliographies et les index
- Notes bibliogr.
Note sur le contenu
- I. Abandoned or Merely Lost in Translation? Introduction State Discourse in New China Late Socialist Transition Propaganda Trends : Proscribing the Offensive Contextualizing the Yellow Emperor The Final Frontier : Purging the Language (Once More) In Lieu of a Conclusion II. Warming to Socialism in the Cold Mountains Introduction From Local Headmen to Civil Servants Encountering Socialism New Era of Development "Socialism Is Good !" Tension of Ethnicity and Bureaucracy Conclusion
Résumé ou extrait
- Présentation de l'éditeur : "Political action and political thinking ("ideology") provide the twin sets of data on which most conventional analyses of the Chinese Communist Party's transformation are made to rest. The 21st century's unprecedented concern with information and communication technologies has underscored, however, the need for analysts to upgrade the relevance of political language to any actionable appreciation of an untidy present and forecasting of a potentially turbulent future. A study that focuses on how language and state officialdom intersect in the areas of propaganda and nationalities/ethnic affairs is reported here. A theoretical analysis of written primary sources and first-hand ethnographic data make plain that unless language-in-use is factored into analyses of China's past and present, even the most judicious conjecture concerning What May Happen Next ? may well be fatally skewed."
Sujet - Nom commun
Sujet - Nom géographique
- Chine -- Langues -- Aspect politique
Lien copié.
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