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Digital Transnationalism : Chinese-Language Media in Australia / Wanning Sun.

EBSCOhost Academic eBook Collection (North America) Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Sun, Wanning, author.
Yu, Haiqing, author.
Series:
Chinese Overseas ; 21.
Asian Studies E-Books Online, Collection 2023.
Chinese Overseas ; 21
Asian Studies E-Books Online, Collection 2023
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Mass media--Australia.
Mass media.
Mass media--China.
Social media--Australia. .
Social media.
Social media--China. .
Digital media.
China--Foreign relations--Australia.
China.
Australia--Foreign relations--China.
Australia.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (295 pages)
Edition:
1st ed.
Other Title:
Chinese-Language Media in Australia
Place of Publication:
Leiden ; Boston : Brill, 2023.
Language Note:
English
Summary:
This is the first book in English on Chinese-language digital media in Australia. The book comes at a time when the relationship between China and the West is at its most troubling since the end of the Cold War. Combining rich ethnographic insights with dispassionate analysis, this investigation into Australia’s Chinese-language digital and social media sheds new light on how migrants from the People’s Republic of China negotiate two media, cultural and political systems. The book is a timely antidote to the polarized and often simplistic positions that dominate ongoing debates about the Chinese diaspora and diasporic media, and injects much-needed nuance into analyses of the changing face of Chinese transnationalism.
Contents:
Acknowledgements
List of Figures and Tables
List of Abbreviations
Introduction:A New Direction in Global Chinese Studies?
1 Between Diaspora Identity and Citizenship: Social Capital in Transnational Space
2 Place-Making, Flexible Citizens, and the Reality of Living “In Between”
3 Soft Power and Diaspora Diplomacy
4 Digital Diaspora and Transnational Place-Making
5 Australia: A Country-Specific Approach
6 Chinese-Language Media as an Instrument of Chinese Influence?
7 Methods and Approach
8 Chapters
Media, Migration, and the New Chinese Diaspora:History, Politics, and Context
1 History of Earlier Chinese Migration
2 New Migrants from the PRC
3 “New New” Migrants from the PRC
4 Changing Demographic Patterns and Characteristics
5 Changing Political Climate
6 Chinese-Language Media in Australia
WeChat Subscription Accounts:Regulation, Business Model, and Institutional Context
1 WeChat and WeChat Subscription Accounts
2 The Political and Economic Context
3 Typology of WSA s and Their Regulatory Framework
4 Top Fifty WSA s in Australia:A Collective Portrait
5 Beyond a Simplistic Notion of Control:Conclusion
Production and Consumption of News on WeChat:Platform, Market, and Readers
1 Methods
2 Top Ten WSA s:Typology of Content and Style
3 Case Studies:Hong Kong Protests and Horton Versus Sun
4 Cultural Production of News on WeChat
5 Conclusion
Content Flow, Cultural Brokering, and the Identity of In-betweenness:The Case ofSydney Today
1 Content:Where, What, and Which Sources?
2 Ethno-Transnational Media between Host Country and Motherland: The Politics of Content Flow
3 The Chinese-Language Media In Between
4 Narrative Analysis of Sydney Today Stories
5 Editors as Content Brokers
6 Cultural Brokering and a New “In-Between” Identity Politics:A Conclusion
Self-Making through Self-Media:New Opinion Brokers in Transnational Space
1 Key Issues Pertaining to Self-Media
2 Cultural Economy of the Chinese Self-Media Industry
3 Chinese Content Entrepreneurs in Australia:Case Studies
4 Discussion: Self-Media Operators as Information and Opinion Brokers
Mobility and Micro-Entrepreneurship:Daigou as Transnational Subjects
1 Researching Daigou: A Note on Methods
2 Daigou in Australian Metropolitan Centers
3 Chinese Social Commerce Platforms and the Network of Networks
4 Chinese Micro-Entrepreneurial Mobility
Becoming Active Citizens:The Australian Federal Election and Civic Education
1 Approaching WeChat as a New Civic Space
2 Negotiating Boundaries and Performing Digital Acts
3 Exemplary Citizens
4 Discussion and Conclusion
Negotiating Flexibility:COVID-19 and the New Politics of Transnationalism
1 Transnational Migrants and Citizenship Engagement
2 COVID-19: From China to Australia:Timeline and Context
3 Active Citizens or Still Too Chinese?
4 Learning about Rights and Duties as Citizens
5 Selfish Flexible Citizenship?
6 Altruistic Flexible Citizenship?
7 Between a Rock and a Hard Place
8 Conclusion
Conclusion:Toward a New Transnational Subject
References
Index.
Notes:
Description based on print version record.
Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.
Other Format:
Print version: Sun, Wanning Digital Transnationalism
ISBN:
9789004528666
9004528660
OCLC:
1369652011
Publisher Number:
10.1163/9789004528666 DOI

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