Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 March 2009
From 2006 to 2008 the predominant theme in the Chinese media was preparations for the 2008 Olympics. These preparations were not merely about putting up new sports stadiums; China also underwent a massive public etiquette campaign, aimed at “civilizing” Chinese citizens. This was nominally so they could be good hosts during the Beijing Olympics. The 2006–08 emphasis on Olympic-related news coverage and the ongoing public morals campaign was what I have called a campaign of mass distraction: a propaganda campaign designed to mobilize the population around a common goal, and distract them from more troubling issues such as inflation, unemployment, political corruption and environmental degradation. This article discusses China's Olympics propaganda within the context of the modernization of the Chinese Communist Party's propaganda system – which has included incorporating practices originating in modern democratic states – and considers in what way changes in the propaganda system reflect changes in China's system of political control.
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25 The Central Propaganda Department (CPD) has a leadership (lingdao) relationship with some sectors of the propaganda system such as the media, and “guidance” relations with other sectors such as sport or health. “Guidance” means just that: the General Administration of Sport is not under orders from the CPD. The CPD is not concerned with sporting issues per se, but in a more abstract sense where they touch on ideological concerns or are connected to propaganda.
26 The following is a report from the meeting of a local level Beijing Olympic News Co-ordinating Group, accessed via a cache site. http://209.85.141.104/search?q=cache:DrQA_aZUl9sJ:www.chuzhou.gov.cn/art.
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35 In 2006 PBS produced a documentary on how “tank man” had helped shape Western perceptions of contemporary China. See http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/tankman/view/.
36 Scenes from the CCTV reporting on “tank man” appears in the documentary Gate of Heavenly Peace (1996).
37 Robin Pogrebin, “China won't lend art works to Asia Society exhibition,” 20 August 2008, http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/20/arts/design/20soci.html.
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45 NBTX, No. 15 (2007), p. 1. See also “Censors make news in PR battle,” 14 August 2008, South China Morning Post, which reproduced a copy of instructions from the CPD with a detailed list of propaganda dos and don'ts in the period leading up to and during the Olympics.
46 NBTX, No. 2 (2005), p. 9.
47 NBTX, No. 15 (2007), p. 1.
48 Documents relevant to this scandal are available at http://www.chinasmack.com/stories/kidney-stone-gate-fake-baby-milk-powder-sanlu-baidu/.
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56 There are many examples of this sentiment online: the following video clip, made by a UK-based Chinese student, is representative. See Jordan Chen, “Unfair media London,” http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fNgT5HdCqg4.
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