Twitter @China Media Project: 2022-11-28~2022-12-04

2022-12-02 作者: cnmediaproject 原文 #Twitter 的其它文章

The CMP is an independent research project studying the Chinese media landscape within the PRC and globally, as well as the CCP’s media and political discourse.

1: 2022-11-29 04:37:13+08:00 推文

RT China Law Translate
A few folks have shared this article saying that “liking” illegal or negative content will now be punished–
I think that’s a stretch.

2: 2022-11-29 07:41:11+08:00 推文

The continued indignities of Covid lockdown and the mechanisms of oppression they have laid bare have now broken through the veneer of ideology and sloganeering.

Vivian Wu: This video puts me finally into tears. A beijing accent voice shouting “we don’t need 为人民服务(a Maoism slogan that claims serving the People, subjects) , we need to help ourselves. We should have humanitarianism, we are humans, with self respect independent dignity and souls

3: 2022-11-30 01:44:13+08:00 推文

RT Cate Cadell
A thread here for those who don’t understand why the China protests over the weekend protests are so shockingly rare.

Surveillance. In. China. Is. Extreme. Think you could evade Chinese police? Let’s walk through it:

4: 2022-11-30 11:12:19+08:00 推文

And if the mode of overcoming becomes another obstacle to overcome, then glory piles upon glory.

5: 2022-11-30 11:15:20+08:00 推文

As China resorts to intimidation and surveillance to restrain protests over harsh Covid policies and economic and social concerns, CMP speaks to Josh Chin and Liza Lin, about their new book on data and surveillance in China & where it might be heading. https://chinamediaproject.org/2022/11/30/the-state-of-surveillance-in-china/

6: 2022-11-30 11:17:23+08:00 推文

Re “If XJP can find a way out of the zero-Covid quagmire, people might go back to their algorithmically streamlined lives and forget about their current frustrations. If not, then you’ll probably see the hard edge of surveillance being used more and more, and generating resistance.”

7: 2022-11-30 20:10:07+08:00 推文

Colorless Tributes for Jiang Zemin: A quick look at how CCP media and more commercially oriented sites treated the news this afternoon of the death of the former leader. https://chinamediaproject.org/2022/11/30/dark-tributes-for-jiang-zemin/

8: 2022-11-30 20:23:47+08:00 推文

This piece from the CMP archives (2017), originally published through SupChina, looks at the political rituals and language surrounding the death of “esteemed,” “great” and “outstanding” Party comrades. Great context for the death today of Jiang Zemin. https://chinamediaproject.org/2022/11/30/the-politics-of-passing-on/

9: 2022-11-30 20:25:56+08:00 推文

The Xinhua release this afternoon on Jiang’s death refers to him as a “great proletarian revolutionary.” The “great” here is a subtle distinction, but an important one — an honor bestowed on few.

China Media Project: This piece from the CMP archives (2017), originally published through SupChina, looks at the political rituals and language surrounding the death of “esteemed,” “great” and “outstanding” Party comrades. Great context for the death today of Jiang Zemin.
https://chinamediaproject.org/2022/11/30/the-politics-of-passing-on/

10: 2022-12-01 11:38:13+08:00 推文

In this newly relevant piece from the CMP archives, David Bandurski looks at the politics surrounding the death of CCP officials, and some of the fixtures of related discourse. https://chinamediaproject.org/2022/11/30/the-politics-of-passing-on/

11: 2022-12-01 15:22:14+08:00 推文

Official announcements about Jiang Zemin’s death may seem like heaps of nonsense. But take a closer look at newspaper layouts today and they tell us clearly where the Chinese Communist Party would like us to focus — on the defining of legacies. https://chinamediaproject.org/2022/12/01/looking-the-peoples-daily-in-the-eye/

12: 2022-12-01 20:05:21+08:00 推文

David Bandurski looks at the messaging conveyed today through the rigidly identical black-and-white front pages of CCP-run newspapers in China, paying tribute to deceased former general secretary Jiang Zemin. Hint: look at the “newspaper eye” (报眼). https://chinamediaproject.org/2022/12/01/looking-the-peoples-daily-in-the-eye/

13: 2022-12-01 20:10:37+08:00 推文

Re The key language used to define Jiang’s legacy is included in the second paragraph of the official Xinhua announcement run yesterday, and on the front page today. It is pulled out and placed in the “newspaper eye,” the space to the right of the masthead.

14: 2022-12-01 20:12:28+08:00 推文

Re “Comrade Jiang Zemin was an outstanding leader who had the utmost respect of our Party, our military, and the various peoples of our nation; a great Marxist, a great proletarian revolutionary, politician, military expert, and diplomat . . . “ It’s in other CCP papers too.

15: 2022-12-01 20:14:06+08:00 推文

Re Is it unusual in its effusiveness? No, not at all. In fact, it almost perfectly mirrors the language used for Deng Xiaoping following his death on February 19, 1997. Just look at the two front pages side by side. Almost identical, even the headlines and “newspaper eye” (报眼).

16: 2022-12-01 20:15:23+08:00 推文

Re The phrase “an outstanding leader who had the utmost respect of our Party, our military, and the various peoples of our nation” (我党我军我国各族人民公认的享有崇高威望的卓越领导人) — used for Jiang yesterday and today — originated with Deng’s death.

17: 2022-12-02 14:56:18+08:00 推文

Some interesting insights in CMP’s latest monthly discourse report with Sinocism. This one is free to read, so don’t miss out!

Bill Bishop: China’s Political Discourse October 2022: The Dust Settles on the 20th National Congress of the CCP, by @cnmediaproject
https://open.substack.com/pub/sinocism/p/chinas-political-discourse-october-a83?r=2e&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web


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