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Informationen zum Autor Jianhua Yao received his doctoral degree in sociology from Queen's University, Canada, and his research interests include political economy, media and communication, and labor issues. Klappentext Knowledge Workers in Contemporary China: Reform, and Resistance in the Publishing Industry concentrates on the trajectories of the labor process transformation of knowledge workers, mainly editors, in the Chinese publishing industry. The book focuses on their changing social, economic, and political roles; their dilemmas, challenges, and opportunities associated with current social reform; and China's integration into the global political economy. At its core, the book addresses three different yet interrelated processes of the political economy of communication: commodification, structuration, and spatialization in the Chinese publishing industry. It examines whether worker organizations and trade unions are effective in presenting editors' legitimate rights and interests in current publishing reform. Through the political economic analysis of knowledge workers in China's publishing industry, Jianhua Yao helps readers better understand the broader social and economic transformations, specifically the network of power relations and institutional contexts in which Chinese editors are situated, that have been taking place in China since the late 1970s. Zusammenfassung This book concentrates on knowledge workers, mainly editors, in the Chinese publishing industry. The book focuses on their changing social, economic, and political roles; their dilemmas, challenges, and opportunities associated with current social reform; and China’s integration into the global political economy. Inhaltsverzeichnis Table of ContentsPreface and AcknowledgmentsList of TablesAbbreviationIntroductionKnowledge Workers in China's Publishing IndustryClass Consciousness of Knowledge WorkersChinese Media Workers and EditorsResponses and UnionsResearch QuestionsMethodsArchival StudiesSurveysSemi-structured InterviewsWhat Makes the Two Publishing Houses SpecialBasic Interview QuestionsSupplementary InterviewsOrganization of the BookChapter 1 Political Economy, Media Reform, and Knowledge WorkersPolitical EconomyWhat Is Political EconomyCentral Qualities of Political EconomyMedia ReformThe Party Principle and the Propaganda ModelMedia CommodificationMedia DemocratizationKnowledge WorkersLabor and Class AnalysisLabor and GlobalizationLabor and UnionsConclusionChapter 2 The Commodification Process: Publishing Reform in ChinaThe Commodification ProcessChina's Media ReformBackground of the Chinese Media ReformChina's Publishing Industry ReformAdministrative Management of China's Publishing IndustryPublishing Industry LawsChanges in China's Publishing IndustryThe Advertising Industry in ChinaPrecarious Chinese EditorsBasic Information of the SurveysContingent EmploymentThe Decline of Social Welfare BenefitsIntense Work PressureConclusionChapter 3 The Structuration Process: The Five Critical ProblemsThe Five Critical ProblemsTechnological Changes in ChinaFollowing the Party Principle in the Media Marketization ProcessThe Rise of Market CompetitionStrict Party ControlThe Growing Tension within the Propaganda-Commercial ModelThe Marketization Process in the Social Welfare SystemChanges in the Pension SystemChanges in the Health Care SystemSmashing of the Work-unit SystemThe Inner Division of the Working ClassDivisions between Editors and Leader0Inner Divisions of EditorsConclusion: Social Changes, Class Relations, and Power DynamicsChapter 4 The Spatialization Process: Globalization, Neoliberalism, and the Global Division of LaborGlobalization and the Chinese Publishing IndustryTransnational Media Corporations in ChinaChinese Publishing Exports in the Global Media SphereChinese Publishing ConglomeratesNeoliberalism and Chinese EditorsThe ...