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positions 2008 16(3):539-567; DOI:10.1215/10679847-2008-013
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Journalism, Social Value, and a Philosophy of the Everyday in 1920s China

Rebecca E. Karl

This essay takes a 1920s scandalous case—the Ma-Wang Incident—as a study of the relationship established in Chinese journalism between events and everyday life. It argues that journalism, as a commodity form, and the emergence of everyday life as a problem of sociality were intrinsically linked, not merely through tabloid exposure but through the exploration of the philosophical import of the everyday as a problem of social value.


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