Mr. Jonathan Kaufman
14/03/2023 (Tuesday) 15:00-16:00 E21B-G035 The Last Kings of Shanghai: How Two Rival Jewish Dynasties Ignited the Rise of China Abstract: Shanghai, 1936. The Cathay Hotel, located on the city's famous waterfront, is one of
Prof. Xiaoping Wu & Prof. Richard Fitzgerald
09/03/2023 (Thursday) 13:00-14:00 E21B-G002 Internet memes and health communication in the time of COVID-19 Abstract: This study examines official health communication through internet memes during the COVID 19 through drawing upon a case study
Prof. Dongjing Kang
06/03/2023 (Monday) 13:00-14:00 E21B-G035 Taming the Barbarian Empress: Post-alteric Imaginary of Gender Egalitarianism and Pan-Chinese Nationalism in the Legend of Xiao Chuo Abstract: Representations of ethnic minority women often symbolized China’s efforts in nation-
Prof. Mike YAO
02/03/2023 (Thursday) 13:00-14:00 E21B-G002 From Computer-mediated Communication to AI-moderated Communication—prospects and limits of media and human communication research Abstract: The advent of artificial intelligence (AI) has dramatically impacted the way we communicate and how
Prof. Richard Fitzgerald
09/02/2023 (Thursday) 13:00-14:00 E21B-G002 The Emerging Contours of Digital Society: Remastering, Reconsideration, Reorientation and New Socio-Digital Domains Abstract This talk is based on a recently published book, The Sage Handbook of Digital Society (2023),
Prof. Steve Jones
30/11/2022 (Wednesday) 11:00-12:00 E21B-G002 Social Robots and Research Ethics Abstract: It is already clear that data is being collected from humans with and through computers and other devices. Will the rapid dissemination of sensors,




