|
IP and Law
Cowardly Wiley? Mark Kitto in the news againPosted by Jeremy Goldkorn, March 17, 2006 6:09 PM
From today's Financial Times: When Mark Kitto received a draft contract late last year from Wiley, the US-listed publishing house, he had every reason to feel confident that his book about doing business in China would soon be released for sale. The article also quotes Tim Clissold, author of Mr China: Mr Clissold, who read Mr Kitto’s manuscript and enjoyed it, said Wiley’s publishers would have been “absolute patsies” to drop the project on political grounds. “The fact that [my book] was published in China is important, because it tells you the Chinese are rather more self-confident about accepting criticism than the average foreign publisher might think,” he said. “The whole thing comes down to the tone – it’s how you write, not what you write.” Read the whole thing at the FT link below — subscription not necessary. |
Jobs in China
Recent Comments
Scott Loar on
The Internet wages war on the liberal media
Bankers ar on
To die poor is a sin
axis on
The slapped historian speaks
BloggerBil on
Grass-roots journalism meets the modern news weekly
Ayse V. on
19 year-old girl arrested for gory murder
Danwei.TV
Danwei Model Workers
![]() Recommended blogs and new media
China Media Timeline
Major media events over the last three decades
Books on China
To die poor is a sin: An excerpt of Factory Girls by Leslie T. Chang.
In Wang Shuo's No Man's Land: Geremie Barme addresses Wang Shuo's 千万别把我当人.
Swimming with Mao, a memoir essay: This memoir piece is by Xujun Eberlein, author of the new short story book Apologies Forthcoming'.
Front Page of the Day
A different newspaper every weekday
From the Vault
Classic Danwei posts
+ Let the Spiel Begin by Geremie R. Barmé (2006.07): Zhang Yimou, the Olympics opening ceremony, and a historically positive song and dance epics. + Dreck, the new bestseller by your local party secretary (2006.10): Li Dalun writes books, Yu Qiuyu gives advice on officials writing, and two columnists discuss the corruption involved in publishing officials' works. + People: Tina Liu (2004.09): Tina Liu is Hong Kong's most prominent image stylist, but her mercurial career has involved her in almost every aspect of Hong Kong's media world.
Danwei Archives
Danwei Feeds
Via Feedsky
or Feedburner |


