In this essay, I take the recent publication of several texts examining the historical and contemporary phenomena of Sinophobia, Orientalism, and Sinologism as an opening for theorizing underlying and related issues i...In this essay, I take the recent publication of several texts examining the historical and contemporary phenomena of Sinophobia, Orientalism, and Sinologism as an opening for theorizing underlying and related issues including pervasive anti-China biases in Western journalism and China's position therein. In addition to illustrating how the concepts of Orientalism arise from Western historical and epistemological foundations, I theorize what I call a "new yellow journalism" that has grown in tandem with "China's rise" and the threat this indicates to many Western observers, and how this threat and others like it have been met in the age of "new imperialism." I compare this new phenomenon with its historical antecedents, "yellow journalism" and America's emergence as a imperialism power with the Spanish-American War (1898), and note several key insights offered by recent critical analyses of that period, which together suggest a confluence of different players, including policymakers, new media business models, and what I describe as a type of public "corporatism" in which citizens, particularly Americans, function effectively as shareholders in maintaining hegemonic if not imperialist power.展开更多
文摘In this essay, I take the recent publication of several texts examining the historical and contemporary phenomena of Sinophobia, Orientalism, and Sinologism as an opening for theorizing underlying and related issues including pervasive anti-China biases in Western journalism and China's position therein. In addition to illustrating how the concepts of Orientalism arise from Western historical and epistemological foundations, I theorize what I call a "new yellow journalism" that has grown in tandem with "China's rise" and the threat this indicates to many Western observers, and how this threat and others like it have been met in the age of "new imperialism." I compare this new phenomenon with its historical antecedents, "yellow journalism" and America's emergence as a imperialism power with the Spanish-American War (1898), and note several key insights offered by recent critical analyses of that period, which together suggest a confluence of different players, including policymakers, new media business models, and what I describe as a type of public "corporatism" in which citizens, particularly Americans, function effectively as shareholders in maintaining hegemonic if not imperialist power.