Lin Keqin
Lin Keqin is a research fellow of the Center for Sino-Foreign Comparative Cultural Studies of SISU, a three-level professor of liberal arts, a PhD in literature. His major research orientations include comparative journalism and communication, cognitive communication and cultural discourse. He has more than thirty research papers published in authoritative journals at home and abroad. He has presided over a general planned project called “the going-out strategies of Chinese culture and innovative thinking of approaches to going out” which is supported by the national social science fund. This project has won several rewards in provincial\ministry level. He is a visiting scholar of Hong Kong Baptist University, Nanyang Technological University and Sapporo University. He is now the standing vice-president of Cognitive Communication Association of China, a research fellow of the development and research center of Chongqing Municipal Government and the vice president of Enterprise and Culture Construction Research Society of Chongqing Municipality (first-rate society).
Major Representative Works:
1. Research on the Position of International Cultural Propaganda in Chongqing during the Anti-Japanese War. (Monograph), Sichuan University Press, 2012
2. Self-awareness and Image Reconstruction: Dimension Analysis on International Dissemination of Chinese Culture from Dual Perspectives. Modern Media, No.7, 2017
3. Embodied-Cognition Communication Concept: A Critical Idea in the Era of Post Mass Communication, Editorial Friend, No.7, 2016
4. Spirit Communication from the Perspective of Western Intellectual History. Foreign Languages and Literature, No.4, 2016
5. Macroscopic Academic Vision of Cognitive Communication. Modern Media, No.12, 2015
6. A Comparative Research on Liu Yong and Dazai Osamu’s Living Environment and Literary Style, Foreign Languages and Literature, No.6, 2009
7. From Professional Consciousness to Theoretical Reconstruction ——Comparison of practice on News Professionalism between China and Foreign Countries. Modern Communication, No.6, 2008