Abstract :
This report presents a portrait of contemporary liberal
Chinese journalists. Compared with the national average ten years ago, a
typical journalist in Guangzhou is younger, better-educated and more likely
to be female, and less likely to be a Communist Party member. The survey
shows that the literati value coexists with both the modern professional and
Party journalism value during the current journalistic professionalization.
Such coexistence results in a complexity in journalists’ attitude and behaviour.
Journalists tend to be inactively liberal: possessing liberal attitudes
but not engaging themselves in action. The survey also reports evidence
on the contingency of journalistic behaviour logic. Professional logic
shows its popularity when journalists encounter conflicts involving legal,
economic and political concerns, but not in cases involving moral or cultural
conflicts. Neither professional nor commercial logic is strong enough to
oppose political logic when journalists are handling severe political issues.