The Sage Handbook of Chinese Digital Media and Communication is the first comprehensive reference work dedicated to the fast-evolving field of digital media and communication in China. Marking three decades since China's official connection to the internet, this landmark volume brings together leading scholars from across the globe to examine the profound transformations digital technologies have brought to Chinese society, politics, culture, and economy. Spanning activism, governance, labor, industry, everyday life, and research methods, the handbook offers a critical and interdisciplinary…mehr
The Sage Handbook of Chinese Digital Media and Communication is the first comprehensive reference work dedicated to the fast-evolving field of digital media and communication in China. Marking three decades since China's official connection to the internet, this landmark volume brings together leading scholars from across the globe to examine the profound transformations digital technologies have brought to Chinese society, politics, culture, and economy. Spanning activism, governance, labor, industry, everyday life, and research methods, the handbook offers a critical and interdisciplinary survey of the field. It explores how the internet and digital media have reshaped political participation, civil society, and national identity; how state regulation and surveillance intersect with innovation and platformization; and how digital labor, fandom, gaming, and e-commerce are redefining cultural production, consumption and economy. It also reflects on the lived experiences of users, from parenting and diaspora to queer communities and mobile rituals. Structured across five thematic parts, the volume not only maps the current landscape of Chinese digital media and communication but also interrogates the knowledge production that has shaped the field. It invites dialogue with global digital media scholarship and offers a timely reflection on the past, present, and future of China's digital transformation. The Sage Handbook of Chinese Digital Media and Communication is an indispensable resource for scholars, researchers, and students seeking a comprehensive understanding of the multifaceted landscape of Chinese digital media and communication. By examining past achievements, current trends, and future prospects, this collective effort establishes a foundation for advancing knowledge and fostering meaningful dialogues in this rapidly evolving field. Part 1: Activism, Civil Society and Politics Part 2: Technology, Regulation and Governance Part 3: Platform, Labor and Industry Part 4: User, Culture and Everyday Life Part 5: Method, Approach and Reflections
Introduction - Jian Xu, Shaohua Guo and Weiyu Zhang Part 1: Activism, Civil Society and Politics Chapter 1: Digital vigilantism in China: Dynamics and politics in networked justice-seeking - Qian Huang, Yiming Wang & Yiran Ding Chapter 2: Digital media and contentious politics in Hong Kong - Francis Lee Chapter 3: Understanding China's digital feminism: Struggles, resilience, and businesses - Altman Yuzhu Peng & Fengshu Liu Chapter 4: China's digital nationalism: Narratives, technological affordance, practice - Florian Schneider Chapter 5: Digital environmentalism and non-confrontational activism in the lifeworld - Weiyu Zhang, Yu Sun, Ding Xiang Chua & Yun Lin Seet Chapter 6: Activism of no action: The lying-flat movement in Chinese cyberspace - Yuan Wang & Rongbin Han Chapter 7: Digital citizenship of young people in China - Jun Fu Chapter 8: Public opinion, Yulun and Yuqing - Dan Chen Chapter 9: Panda as the flagship of China's digital diplomacy: Rethinking the intersection of network and emotional narrative strategy - Zhao Alexandre Huang & Rui Wang Part 2: Technology, Regulation and Governance Chapter 10: China's internet governance path: From 'great country' to 'strong country' strategy - Gianluigi Negro Chapter 11: Civilisation, technology and surveillance in the Middle Kingdom - Michael Keane Chapter 12: Communication politics and the social credit system - Haiqing Yu Chapter 13: Big data and public health governance: A review of China's health code system during the Covid-19 pandemic - Wilfred Yang Wang & Pengfei Fu Chapter 14: 'Double-bind regulation' of private internet firms in China: Dilemmas, autonomy and resilience - Aifang Ma Chapter 15: Regulating Chinese livestreaming industries: Historical regulatory-industrial trends and current issues - Xiaofei Han Chapter 16: Tensions and contradictions in China's approach to AI Governance - Huw Roberts, Lujain Ibrahim, Junhua Zhu Chapter 17: China's digital publishing transformation: Platformisation, artificial intelligence, and regulatory complexity - Xiang Ren Part 3: Platform, Labor and Industry Chapter 18: Cross-cultural comparative platform studies: Insights from short video research - Xu Chen & D. Bondy Valdovinos Kaye Chapter 19: The 'unsettling' political economy of communication in China: State reconfigurations and financialization of digital news industries - Chenhao Ye Chapter 20: From Weibo to AI: How research on digital journalism reflects technological - Kecheng Fang & Youyi Wei Chapter 21: E-commerce and rural development: Taobao Villages in China - Anthony Li Chapter 22: Wanghong and the formation of ethical subjects in the Chinese creator economy - Jian Lin & Han Fu Chapter 23: China's digital fandom and platformized affective labor - Yiyi Yin Chapter 24: Reconsidering the globalization of Chinese digital games: A platformization turn - Gejun Huang Chapter 25: Gaming mobility: Players, industry, market and state rulemaking in China - Zixue Tai & Fengbin Hu Chapter 26: Chinese digital giant going out under digital transformation and platformization: Rethinking Tencent's pan-entertainment strategy - Wenjia Tang Part 4: User, Culture and Everyday Life Chapter 27: Digital media, Chinese diaspora, and new transnational subjects - A case study from Australia - Wanning Sun Chapter 28: Chinese gay men's digital media studies: A critical review - Weishan Miao & Jiacheng Liu Chapter 29: The Remaking of an Underclass in Digital China: Contested Voices, Disciplined Cultural Production, and a Rising Lumpen Internet - Jiaxi Hou Chapter 30: Internet literature in China revisited - Michel Hockx Chapter 31: Revisiting Web 2.0 via blogs: A comparative study of mainland China and Taiwan - Shaohua Guo Chapter 32: Digital parenting in China: State, school, and family - Xinyu Zhao Chapter 33: Routinizing Technology: Mobile Payments and the Reinvention of Social Interactions in China - Yipeng Xi Part 5: Method, Approach and Reflections Chapter 34: Digital ethnography in, on and through China: A methodological history - Gabriele de Seta Chapter 35: How to use computational methods and online experiments to study Chinese digital media - Yingdan Lu & Matt DeButts Chapter 36: Researching Chinese internet history: A social memory perspective - Shiwen Wu, Xiaoya Yang & Jian Xu Chapter 37: Researching China's digital economy: A critical political economy perspective - Min Tang
Introduction - Jian Xu, Shaohua Guo and Weiyu Zhang Part 1: Activism, Civil Society and Politics Chapter 1: Digital vigilantism in China: Dynamics and politics in networked justice-seeking - Qian Huang, Yiming Wang & Yiran Ding Chapter 2: Digital media and contentious politics in Hong Kong - Francis Lee Chapter 3: Understanding China's digital feminism: Struggles, resilience, and businesses - Altman Yuzhu Peng & Fengshu Liu Chapter 4: China's digital nationalism: Narratives, technological affordance, practice - Florian Schneider Chapter 5: Digital environmentalism and non-confrontational activism in the lifeworld - Weiyu Zhang, Yu Sun, Ding Xiang Chua & Yun Lin Seet Chapter 6: Activism of no action: The lying-flat movement in Chinese cyberspace - Yuan Wang & Rongbin Han Chapter 7: Digital citizenship of young people in China - Jun Fu Chapter 8: Public opinion, Yulun and Yuqing - Dan Chen Chapter 9: Panda as the flagship of China's digital diplomacy: Rethinking the intersection of network and emotional narrative strategy - Zhao Alexandre Huang & Rui Wang Part 2: Technology, Regulation and Governance Chapter 10: China's internet governance path: From 'great country' to 'strong country' strategy - Gianluigi Negro Chapter 11: Civilisation, technology and surveillance in the Middle Kingdom - Michael Keane Chapter 12: Communication politics and the social credit system - Haiqing Yu Chapter 13: Big data and public health governance: A review of China's health code system during the Covid-19 pandemic - Wilfred Yang Wang & Pengfei Fu Chapter 14: 'Double-bind regulation' of private internet firms in China: Dilemmas, autonomy and resilience - Aifang Ma Chapter 15: Regulating Chinese livestreaming industries: Historical regulatory-industrial trends and current issues - Xiaofei Han Chapter 16: Tensions and contradictions in China's approach to AI Governance - Huw Roberts, Lujain Ibrahim, Junhua Zhu Chapter 17: China's digital publishing transformation: Platformisation, artificial intelligence, and regulatory complexity - Xiang Ren Part 3: Platform, Labor and Industry Chapter 18: Cross-cultural comparative platform studies: Insights from short video research - Xu Chen & D. Bondy Valdovinos Kaye Chapter 19: The 'unsettling' political economy of communication in China: State reconfigurations and financialization of digital news industries - Chenhao Ye Chapter 20: From Weibo to AI: How research on digital journalism reflects technological - Kecheng Fang & Youyi Wei Chapter 21: E-commerce and rural development: Taobao Villages in China - Anthony Li Chapter 22: Wanghong and the formation of ethical subjects in the Chinese creator economy - Jian Lin & Han Fu Chapter 23: China's digital fandom and platformized affective labor - Yiyi Yin Chapter 24: Reconsidering the globalization of Chinese digital games: A platformization turn - Gejun Huang Chapter 25: Gaming mobility: Players, industry, market and state rulemaking in China - Zixue Tai & Fengbin Hu Chapter 26: Chinese digital giant going out under digital transformation and platformization: Rethinking Tencent's pan-entertainment strategy - Wenjia Tang Part 4: User, Culture and Everyday Life Chapter 27: Digital media, Chinese diaspora, and new transnational subjects - A case study from Australia - Wanning Sun Chapter 28: Chinese gay men's digital media studies: A critical review - Weishan Miao & Jiacheng Liu Chapter 29: The Remaking of an Underclass in Digital China: Contested Voices, Disciplined Cultural Production, and a Rising Lumpen Internet - Jiaxi Hou Chapter 30: Internet literature in China revisited - Michel Hockx Chapter 31: Revisiting Web 2.0 via blogs: A comparative study of mainland China and Taiwan - Shaohua Guo Chapter 32: Digital parenting in China: State, school, and family - Xinyu Zhao Chapter 33: Routinizing Technology: Mobile Payments and the Reinvention of Social Interactions in China - Yipeng Xi Part 5: Method, Approach and Reflections Chapter 34: Digital ethnography in, on and through China: A methodological history - Gabriele de Seta Chapter 35: How to use computational methods and online experiments to study Chinese digital media - Yingdan Lu & Matt DeButts Chapter 36: Researching Chinese internet history: A social memory perspective - Shiwen Wu, Xiaoya Yang & Jian Xu Chapter 37: Researching China's digital economy: A critical political economy perspective - Min Tang
Es gelten unsere Allgemeinen Geschäftsbedingungen: www.buecher.de/agb
Impressum
www.buecher.de ist ein Internetauftritt der buecher.de internetstores GmbH
Geschäftsführung: Monica Sawhney | Roland Kölbl | Günter Hilger
Sitz der Gesellschaft: Batheyer Straße 115 - 117, 58099 Hagen
Postanschrift: Bürgermeister-Wegele-Str. 12, 86167 Augsburg
Amtsgericht Hagen HRB 13257
Steuernummer: 321/5800/1497
USt-IdNr: DE450055826