This year is China’s year. On the 8th day of the 8th month at 8pm, it will light the flame of the 29th Olympics Games—bringing not only the world’s athletes to Beijing but also thousands of foreign visitors and millions more through the massive global media contingency that will descend on the capital. What will the media spotlight capture? The luster of an ancient civilization and emerging superpower as many in China hope; or the darker, seedier corners of an authoritarian yet fragile party-state as many in the West suspect. According to the Chinese government, the Olympics games have never been about politics and nor should the Beijing Games. The Games are all about sports: the principles of peace, fair play, friendship, honour and glory ...
Sport and culture interaction has been given a place in most social studies in recent century, and t...
"A major contribution to the study of global events in times of global media. Owning the Olympics te...
“You Americans look down on us—you think of us as low-educated and savage. I hope the Olympics can c...
This year is China’s year. On the 8th day of the 8th month at 8pm, it will light the flame of the 29...
Last year the International Olympic Committee (IOC) invited me to write an essay on the Beijing Olym...
Months before the Opening Ceremonies, in August 2008, it is clear that the Beijing Olympics are a si...
Within China, Beijing's successful bid to host the 2008 Olympics has been celebrated as proof of the...
The aim of this paper is to describe which view the Chinese government in connection with the Olympi...
With the Olympics already more than a week in the past, life in Beijing is slowly returning to norma...
The aim of this paper is to describe which view the Chinese government in connection with the Olympi...
Modern Olympics have always been about national prestige. The 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing was a go...
Granted, the question mark was not included in this main slogan of the 2008 Beijing Olympics. The Be...
This paper reflects on the mediated cultural politics of the Beijing Olympics through analysis of se...
In the latest of our guest blog posts by POLIS Summer School students, one student, who wishes to re...
This paper reflects on the mediated cultural politics of the Beijing Olympics through analysis of se...
Sport and culture interaction has been given a place in most social studies in recent century, and t...
"A major contribution to the study of global events in times of global media. Owning the Olympics te...
“You Americans look down on us—you think of us as low-educated and savage. I hope the Olympics can c...
This year is China’s year. On the 8th day of the 8th month at 8pm, it will light the flame of the 29...
Last year the International Olympic Committee (IOC) invited me to write an essay on the Beijing Olym...
Months before the Opening Ceremonies, in August 2008, it is clear that the Beijing Olympics are a si...
Within China, Beijing's successful bid to host the 2008 Olympics has been celebrated as proof of the...
The aim of this paper is to describe which view the Chinese government in connection with the Olympi...
With the Olympics already more than a week in the past, life in Beijing is slowly returning to norma...
The aim of this paper is to describe which view the Chinese government in connection with the Olympi...
Modern Olympics have always been about national prestige. The 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing was a go...
Granted, the question mark was not included in this main slogan of the 2008 Beijing Olympics. The Be...
This paper reflects on the mediated cultural politics of the Beijing Olympics through analysis of se...
In the latest of our guest blog posts by POLIS Summer School students, one student, who wishes to re...
This paper reflects on the mediated cultural politics of the Beijing Olympics through analysis of se...
Sport and culture interaction has been given a place in most social studies in recent century, and t...
"A major contribution to the study of global events in times of global media. Owning the Olympics te...
“You Americans look down on us—you think of us as low-educated and savage. I hope the Olympics can c...