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The View From Beijing on Black Lives Matter: Why do Black Lives Matter for Beijing?

Burcu, Oana; Wang, Weixiang

The View From Beijing on Black Lives Matter: Why do Black Lives Matter for Beijing? Thumbnail


Authors

OANA BURCU Oana.Burcu@nottingham.ac.uk
Rights Lab Senior Research Fellow

WEIXIANG WANG Weixiang.Wang1@nottingham.ac.uk
Postgraduate Teaching Assistant (Pgta)



Abstract

Why and how has China covered the Black Lives Matter (BLM), a movement with emerging themes closely related to its domestic issues? To what extent does the Chinese media build a unified discourse on sensitive themes that underpin the BLM? These are important questions given China's complicated history with ethnicity, race, and protests. This article argues that Chinese media uses BLM as a multi-faceted propaganda tool to foster cohesion at ideological level. NVivo-powered coding and thematic media analysis show that mainstream media, including official, semi-official and commercial media, and we-media do not present a uniform discourse on BLM. While they generally converge on criticism towards “protests” and “police” action, they display a nuanced “anti-US” and “Greater China” discourse. Moreover, the BLM coverage is used to undermine the US and strengthen by comparison the party-state's legitimacy. In the absence of a reflective discussion on race, racist undertones emerge in Chinese we-media.

Citation

Burcu, O., & Wang, W. (2023). The View From Beijing on Black Lives Matter: Why do Black Lives Matter for Beijing?. Journal of Current Chinese Affairs, https://doi.org/10.1177/18681026231178560

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date May 4, 2023
Online Publication Date Jul 5, 2023
Publication Date Jul 5, 2023
Deposit Date May 16, 2023
Publicly Available Date Jul 20, 2023
Journal Journal of Current Chinese Affairs
Print ISSN 1868-1026
Electronic ISSN 1868-4874
Publisher German Institute of Global and Area Studies / Leibniz-Institut für Globale und Regionale Studien
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
DOI https://doi.org/10.1177/18681026231178560
Keywords propaganda; black lives matter; media; China-US relations Key words: propaganda; BLM; China-US relations; media
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/20832030
Publisher URL https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/18681026231178560

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