US‒China Relations in the Age of Globalization
Series editor: Stephen J. Hartnett
This series publishes the best, cutting-edge work tackling the opportunities and dilemmas of relations between the United States and China in the age of globalization. Books published in the series encompass both historical studies and contemporary analyses, and include both single-authored monographs and edited collections. Our books are comparative, offering in-depth communication-based analyses of how United States and Chinese officials, scholars, artists, and activists configure each other, portray the relations between the two nations, and depict their shared and competing interests. They are interdisciplinary, featuring scholarship that works in and across communication studies, rhetoric, literary criticism, film studies, cultural studies, international studies, and more. And they are international, situating their analyses at the crossroads of international communication and the nuances, complications, and opportunities of globalization as it has unfolded since World War II.
Editorial Board
Rya Butterfield, Nicholls State University
Hsin-I Cheng, Santa Clara University
Patrick Shaou-Whea Dodge, International College Beijing
Qingwen Dong, University of the Pacific
Mohan Dutta, Massey University, New Zealand
John Erni, Hong Kong Baptist University
Xiaohong Gao, Communication University of China
G. Thomas Goodnight, University of Southern California
Robert Hariman, Northwestern University
Rolien Hoyng, Chinese University of Hong Kong
Dongjing Kang, Florida Gulf Coast University
Lisa Keränen, University of Colorado Denver
Zhi Li, Communication University of China
Jingfang Liu, Fudan University
Xing Lu, DePaul University
Trevor Parry-Giles, National Communication Association
Phaedra C. Pezzullo, University of Colorado Boulder
Todd Sandel, University of Macau
Zhiwei Wang, University of Zhengzhou
Guobin Yang, Annenberg School, University of Pennsylvania
Yufang Zhang, University of Shanghai
Please send proposals to Stephen Hartnett.
This series publishes the best, cutting-edge work tackling the opportunities and dilemmas of relations between the United States and China in the age of globalization. Books published in the series encompass both historical studies and contemporary analyses, and include both single-authored monographs and edited collections. Our books are comparative, offering in-depth communication-based analyses of how United States and Chinese officials, scholars, artists, and activists configure each other, portray the relations between the two nations, and depict their shared and competing interests. They are interdisciplinary, featuring scholarship that works in and across communication studies, rhetoric, literary criticism, film studies, cultural studies, international studies, and more. And they are international, situating their analyses at the crossroads of international communication and the nuances, complications, and opportunities of globalization as it has unfolded since World War II.
Editorial Board
Rya Butterfield, Nicholls State University
Hsin-I Cheng, Santa Clara University
Patrick Shaou-Whea Dodge, International College Beijing
Qingwen Dong, University of the Pacific
Mohan Dutta, Massey University, New Zealand
John Erni, Hong Kong Baptist University
Xiaohong Gao, Communication University of China
G. Thomas Goodnight, University of Southern California
Robert Hariman, Northwestern University
Rolien Hoyng, Chinese University of Hong Kong
Dongjing Kang, Florida Gulf Coast University
Lisa Keränen, University of Colorado Denver
Zhi Li, Communication University of China
Jingfang Liu, Fudan University
Xing Lu, DePaul University
Trevor Parry-Giles, National Communication Association
Phaedra C. Pezzullo, University of Colorado Boulder
Todd Sandel, University of Macau
Zhiwei Wang, University of Zhengzhou
Guobin Yang, Annenberg School, University of Pennsylvania
Yufang Zhang, University of Shanghai
Please send proposals to Stephen Hartnett.