
New Books in Communications Ming-Yeh T. Rawnsley et al. eds., "Routledge Handbook of Chinese Media" (Routledge, 2025)
Feb 12, 2026
Yiben Ma, lecturer in international communications and co-editor/contributor to the new Routledge handbook, researches political communication, online Chinese nationalism, and sports and communication. He discusses the handbook’s focus on digital transformation, regional comparisons across PRC, Taiwan, Hong Kong and Macao, shifts in online nationalism, pandemic-era media changes, and emerging methods and topics in Chinese media studies.
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Handbook Reframes The Field
- The Routledge Handbook of Chinese Media (2nd ed.) reframes the field around digital transformation and interdisciplinary approaches.
- The volume gathers 40+ international scholars across 29 chapters to map new theoretical and methodological directions.
Digital Is The Organizing Principle
- Digital media moved from a niche topic in 2015 to the organising principle by 2025.
- The editors argue the digital now centralises political, cultural, and economic analysis across the Sinosphere.
Pandemic Blurred Media Boundaries
- COVID accelerated digital services and blurred online/offline and public/private boundaries.
- This created media practices that are simultaneously controlled and inventive, challenging binary models of power.

