Foreword
Guobin Yang
Preface
Introduction
A New Agenda: Digital Media and Civic Engagement in Networked China
Wenhong Chen and Stephen D. Reese
PART I. Digital Media Technologies and Civic Engagement: Implications, Conditions, and Contradictions
1
Internet Use, Socio-Geographic Context and Citizenship Engagement: A Multilevel Model on the Democratizing Effects of the Internet in China
Baohua Zhou
2
Networked Anti-Corruption: Actors, Styles and Mechanisms
Jia Dai, Fanxu Zeng, and Xin Yu
3
Memetic Engagement as Middle Path Resistance: Contesting Mainland Chinese Immigration and Social Cohesion
Pauline Hope Cheong and Yashu Chen
4
Engaging Government for Environmental Collective Action: Political Implications of ICTs in Rural China
Rong Wang
5
Mobile Activism and Contentious Politics in Contemporary China
Jun Liu
6
Campaigning on Weibo: Independent Candidates' Use of Social Media in Local People's Congress Elections in China
Fei Shen
PART II. Glocalized Media Space: Emergence, Composition, and Function
7
The Unintended Consequences of Deliberative Discourse: A Democratic Attempt for HIV NGOs in China
Samuel Galler
8
The Importance of "Bridges" in the Global News Arena: A Network Study of Bridge Blogs about China
Nan Zheng
9
Online Political Discussion in English and Chinese: The Case of Bo Xilai
Ericka Menchen-Trevino and Yuping Mao
10
Fandom of Foreign Reality TV Shows in the Chinese Cyber Sphere
Weiyu Zhang and Lize Zhang
11
The New Political of Mediated Activism in China: A Critical Review
Elaine Yuan
Wenhong Chen is an assistant professor of media studies at the University of Texas Austin where she studies implications of digital media and communication technologies.
Stephen D. Reese is professor of Journalism and Associate Dean for Academic Affairs for the College of Communication at the University of Texas Austin.
China is a networked society, where people and organizations
maneuver through their relationships. Information flows through
complex networks that encompass both mass media and social media.
This fascinating book scans wide and digs deep to show how. Barry
Wellman, director of NetLab, University of TorontoIt has been
twenty years since China joined the unfolding Internet era, and
this volume helps to document the remarkable developments of this
generation. Twenty years ago, scholars and policy makers were
asking if China, with its cautious approach to information and
information technologies, would be able to fully embrace the
Internet. Ten years ago, those analysts were asking if the network
would change China. This volume demonstrates that China has more
than embraced the network; it has indeed changed it, and that many
of the most important on- and off-ramps of that superhighway are
written in Chinese. Randy Kluver, Associate Professor, Texas
A&M UniversityThis is, of no doubt, a definite book for Chinese
Internet research. The authors have examined cyber-China and its
political dynamics from multiple vantage points, using solid
quantitative and qualitative data, applying both traditional and
the latest digital methods. The result is systematic and
comparative, informative and nuanced. Jack Qiu, Associate
Professor, Chinese University of Hong Kong
China is a networked society, where people and organizations
maneuver through their relationships. Information flows through
complex networks that encompass both mass media and social media.
This fascinating book scans wide and digs deep to show how. Barry
Wellman, director of NetLab, University of TorontoIt has been
twenty years since China joined the unfolding Internet era, and
this volume helps to document the remarkable developments of this
generation. Twenty years ago, scholars and policy makers were
asking if China, with its cautious approach to information and
information technologies, would be able to fully embrace the
Internet. Ten years ago, those analysts were asking if the network
would change China. This volume demonstrates that China has more
than embraced the network; it has indeed changed it, and that many
of the most important on- and off-ramps of that superhighway are
written in Chinese. Randy Kluver, Associate Professor, Texas
A&M UniversityThis is, of no doubt, a definite book for Chinese
Internet research. The authors have examined cyber-China and its
political dynamics from multiple vantage points, using solid
quantitative and qualitative data, applying both traditional and
the latest digital methods. The result is systematic and
comparative, informative and nuanced. Jack Qiu, Associate
Professor, Chinese University of Hong Kong
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