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ID159838
Title ProperWhen London hit the headlines
Other Title Informationhistorical analogy and the chinese media discourse on air pollution
LanguageENG
AuthorLi, Hongtao
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article analyses how Chinese media make sense of smog and air pollution in China through the lens of London's past. Images of London, the fog city, have figured in the Chinese press since the 1870s, and this collective memory has made London a powerful yet malleable tool for discursive contestation on how to frame China's current air pollution problem, which constitutes part of news media's hegemonic and counter-hegemonic practices. Although the classic images of London as a fog city persist to the present day, the new narrative centres on the 1952 Great Smog, which was rediscovered and mobilized by Chinese news media to build an historical analogy. In invoking this foreign past, official media use London to naturalize the smog problem in China and justify the official stance, while commercialized media emphasize the bitter lessons to be learned and call for government action.
`In' analytical NoteChina Quarterly Vol. 234 ; Jun 2018: p. 357-376
Journal SourceChina Quarterly No 234
Key WordsMedia Discourse ;  Historical Analogy ;  Air Pollution in China ;  Fog City ;  The Great Smog


 
 
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