方可成

方可成

助理教授

B.A.and M.A.
Peking University

Ph.D.
University of Pennsylvania

Honors and Awards

  • Exemplary Teaching Award
  • Faculty of Social Sciences
  • The Chinese University of Hong Kong (2022)

 

Research Interests

  • Journalism
  • Political communication
  • Digital media

 

 Current Research

  • How media organizations deal with the journalism crisis
  • New actors in online content provision
  • How platforms and algorithms influence the information environment
  • The ideological landscape on Chinese media

 

Teaching Interests

  • Journalism in the digital age
  • Media and politics
  • Media literacy

 

Advice to students

“The good life is one inspired by love and guided by knowledge.” – Bertrand Russell

Publication List :

Peer Reviewed Journal Articles

Peng, Y., Yang, T., & Fang, K. (2023). The dark side of entertainment? How viral entertaining media build an attention base for the far-right politics of The Epoch Times. New Media & Society, 1-22. https://doi.org/10.1177/14614448231205893 [Corresponding author]view>
Guo, J., Huang, X., & Fang, K. (corresponding author) (2023). Authoritarian environmentalism as reflected in the journalistic sourcing of climate change reporting in China, Environmental Communication, 1-16. https://doi.org/10.1080/17524032.2023.2223774view>
Fang, K. (2023). The social movement was live streamed: a relational analysis of mobile live streaming during the 2019 Hong Kong protests. Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication, 28(1), 1-11. https://doi.org/10.1093/jcmc/zmac033 pdfview>
Zhao, M. & Fang, K. (corresponding author) (2022). Extending the research on digital China: the transnational lens. Information, Communication & Society, 1-16. https://doi.org/10.1080/1369118X.2022.2159487 pdfview>
Fang, K., & Cheng, C. Y. (2022). Social media live streaming as affective news in the anti-ELAB movement in Hong Kong. Chinese Journal of Communication, 1–14. https://doi.org/10.1080/17544750.2022.2083202view>
Guo, J., & Fang, K.* (2022). Where are the missing girls? gender inequality, job precarity, and journalism students’ career choices in China. Journalism, 1-19.https://doi.org/10.1177/14648849221108768 (* corresponding author)view>
Fang, K. (2022). Praise from the international community: How China uses foreign experts to legitimize authoritarian rule. The China Journal, 87(1), 72-91.view>
Fang, K. (2021). What is Zimeiti? the commercial logic of content provision on China’s social media platforms. Chinese Journal of Communication, 1-20.view>
Yang, T. & Fang, K. * (2021). How dark corners collude: a study on an online Chinese Alt-Right community. InformationCommunication and Society. 1-18.
https://doi.org/10.1080/1369118X.2021.1954230  (* corresponding author)
view>
Fang, K., & Repnikova, M. (2021). The state-preneurship model of digital journalism innovation: Cases from China. The International Journal of Press/Politics. DOI: 10.1177/1940161221991779view>
Fang, K. (2020). Turning A Communist Party Leader into an Internet Meme: The Political and Apolitical Aspects of China’s Toad Worship Culture. Information, Communication & Society, 23(1), 38-58.
Repnikova, M. & Fang, K. (2019). Digital Media Experiments in China: “Revolutionizing” Persuasion under Xi. China Quarterly. 239, 679-701.
Repnikova, M. & Fang, K. (2018). Authoritarian Participatory Persuasion 2.0: Netizens as Thought Work Collaborators in China. Journal of Contemporary China, 27(113), 763-779.
Fang, K. & Repnikova, M. (2018). Demystifying “Little Pink”: The Creation and Evolution of a Gendered Label for Nationalistic Activists in China. New Media & Society, 20(6), 2162-2185.
Fang, K. (2016). Investigating Party Media’s Resurgence on Social Media. Journalism Bimonthly (Xinwen Daxue), (3), 45-54.

Non-Peer Reviewed Articles

Fang, K. (2017). “Guard against Fire, Theft, and Journalists”: Public against Journalists in China. Media Asia, 44(1), 55-60.
Repnikova, M. & Fang, K. (2016, October). China’s New Media: Pushing Political Boundaries Without Being Political. Foreign Affairs.
Repnikova, M. & Fang, K. (2015, January). Behind the Fall of China’s Greatest Newspaper. Foreign Policy.

Book Chapters

Fang, K. (2022). The tabloidization of party media: How the People’s Daily and CCTV adapt to social media. In S. I. Zhang (Ed.), Digital journalism in China (pp. 48–60). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003247579-5View>
Fang, K. (2022). “Rumor-Debunking” as a Propaganda and Censorship Strategy in China: The Case of the COVID‐19 Outbreak. In H. Wasserman & D. Madrid-Morales (Eds.), Disinformation in the Global South (pp. 108–122). Wiley-BlackwellView>
Bandurski, D., & Fang, K. (2020). Introduction – The rise and fall of Southern Weekly and the changing landscape of journalism in China: A pivotal event. In J. Guan, Silencing Chinese media: The “Southern Weekly” protests and the fate of civil society in Xi Jinping’s China (pp. vii – xxiv). Rowman & Littlefield.View>

Book Reviews

The American Journalist in the Digital Age: A Half-Century Perspective by Lars Willnat, David H Weaver and G Cleveland Wilhoit. Journalism, 2018.
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