"Privacy" in Semantic Networks on Chinese Social Media: The Case of Sina Weibo: Privacy in Semantic Networks on Sina Weibo
In: Journal of communication, Band 63, Heft 6, S. 1011-1031
ISSN: 1460-2466
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In: Journal of communication, Band 63, Heft 6, S. 1011-1031
ISSN: 1460-2466
In: Signs: journal of women in culture and society, Band 49, Heft 4, S. 953-956
ISSN: 1545-6943
Blog: Global Voices
"In the future, when you come across content leading or picking fights, you can't even tell whether the opposite side is a real person or an artificial intelligence..."
In: Asian survey: a bimonthly review of contemporary Asian affairs, Band 54, Heft 6, S. 1059-1087
ISSN: 0004-4687
World Affairs Online
In: Academy of Marketing Studies Journal, Band 23, Heft 2
SSRN
In: Palgrave Macmillan Memory Studies
'Micro-blogging Memories: Weibo and Collective Remembering in Contemporary China is one of the best books on Chinese internet culture and politics in recent years. It offers a stunningly original and insightful analysis of how journalists and ordinary citizens in China create news, remember contested histories, and explore personal and collective identities on China's preeminent microblogging platform Sina Weibo. Skillfully weaving together stories of past and present, the local and the global, control and resistance, the book provides a rich and textured account of not only the highs and lows of a popular social media platform, but also the dramas of social change in China. This book makes important contributions to the scholarship on digital media and culture, collective memory, and global communication.' - Guobin Yang, University of Pennsylvania, USA This book offers an in-depth account of social media, journalism and collective memory through a five-year analysis of Weibo, a leading Chinese micro-blogging platform, and prism of transitional China in a globalizing world. How does society remember public events in the rapidly changing age of social media? Eileen Le Han examines how various kinds of public events are shared, debated, and their historical significance and worthiness of remembrance highlighted on Weibo. Journalism plays a significant part in mobilizing collective remembering of these events, in a society with rapidly changing topics on the platform, the tightening state control, and nationalism on the rise. The first five years of Weibo reflect a dramatic change in Chinese society, where journalists, media professionals, and opinion leaders in other fields of expertise, together with ordinary citizens directly affected by these changes in everyday life collaborate to witness the rapid social transition
In: Palgrave Macmillan memory studies
"Micro-blogging Memories: Weibo and Collective Remembering in Contemporary China is one of the best books on Chinese internet culture and politics in recent years. It offers a stunningly original and insightful analysis of how journalists and ordinary citizens in China create news, remember contested histories, and explore personal and collective identities on China's preeminent microblogging platform Sina Weibo. Skillfully weaving together stories of past and present, the local and the global, control and resistance, the book provides a rich and textured account of not only the highs and lows of a popular social media platform, but also the dramas of social change in China. This book makes important contributions to the scholarship on digital media and culture, collective memory, and global communication."--Guobin Yang, University of Pennsylvania, USA This book offers an in-depth account of social media, journalism and collective memory through a five-year analysis of Weibo, a leading Chinese micro-blogging platform, and prism of transitional China in a globalizing world. How does society remember public events in the rapidly changing age of social media? Eileen Le Han examines how various kinds of public events are shared, debated, and their historical significance and worthiness of remembrance highlighted on Weibo. Journalism plays a significant part in mobilizing collective remembering of these events, in a society with rapidly changing topics on the platform, the tightening state control, and nationalism on the rise. The first five years of Weibo reflect a dramatic change in Chinese society, where journalists, media professionals, and opinion leaders in other fields of expertise, together with ordinary citizens directly affected by these changes in everyday life collaborate to witness the rapid social transition
In: The China quarterly, Band 225, S. 122-144
ISSN: 1468-2648
AbstractThis article examines the prominence of various user categories as opinion leaders, defined as initiators, agenda setters or disseminators, in 29 corruption cases exposed on Sina Weibo. It finds that ordinary citizens made up the largest category of initiators but that their power of opinion leadership was limited as they had to rely on media organizations to spread news about the cases. News organizations and online media were the main opinion leaders. Government and Party bodies initiated a fair number of cases and, despite not being strong agenda setters or disseminators, were able to dominate public opinion owing to the fact that news organizations and online media mainly published official announcements about the cases. Media organizations also played a secondary role as the voice of the people. While individuals from some other user categories were able to become prominent opinion leaders, news workers are likely to be the most promising user category to challenge official propaganda.
In: The China quarterly, Heft 225, S. 122-144
ISSN: 1468-2648
This article examines the prominence of various user categories as opinion leaders, defined as initiators, agenda setters or disseminators, in 29 corruption cases exposed on Sina Weibo. It finds that ordinary citizens made up the largest category of initiators but that their power of opinion leadership was limited as they had to rely on media organizations to spread news about the cases. News organizations and online media were the main opinion leaders. Government and Party bodies initiated a fair number of cases and, despite not being strong agenda setters or disseminators, were able to dominate public opinion owing to the fact that news organizations and online media mainly published official announcements about the cases. Media organizations also played a secondary role as the voice of the people. While individuals from some other user categories were able to become prominent opinion leaders, news workers are likely to be the most promising user category to challenge official propaganda. (China Q/GIGA)
World Affairs Online
In: International relations of the Asia-Pacific: a journal of the Japan Association of International Relations, Band 20, Heft 1, S. 1-30
ISSN: 1470-4838
We study Chinese attitudes toward the United States, and secondarily toward Japan, Russia, and Vietnam, by analyzing social media discourse on the Chinese social media site, Weibo. We focus separately on a general analysis of attitudes and on Chinese responses to specific international events involving the United States. In general, we find that Chinese netizens are much more interested in US politics than US society. Their views of the United States are characterized by deep ambivalence; they have remarkably favorable attitudes toward many aspects of US influence, whether economic, political, intellectual, or cultural. Attitudes toward the United States become negative when the focus turns to US foreign policy – actions that Chinese netizens view as antithetical to Chinese interests. On the contrary, attitudes toward Japan, Russia, and Vietnam vary a great deal from one another. The contrast between these differentiated Chinese views toward the United States and other countries, on the one hand, and the predominant anti-Americanism in the Middle East, on the other, is striking.
SSRN
Working paper
Digital networks in China, especially the microblogging site Weibo, have provided a rarespace for political participation. China has been strengthening its monopoly of public opinions on the internet in recent years. Consequently, increasing grassroots public opinion leaders have left popular digital networks. However, activists striving for womens rights are stillpopular on Weibo. How do Chinese feminists use digital networks to serve their goal? Whatdoes the increasingly strict internet control mean to them? This paper takes the perspectivesof individual feminist microbloggers on Weibo, using qualitative interview as the researchmethod, to deepen the understanding of digitally networked feminist activism in an authoritarian context and feminists use of digital networks. It focuses on the following aspects:Chinas digital feminists relationship with the digital networks that they use, their digitalfeminist identity and their experiences with the authoritarian system. ; Refereed/Peer-reviewed ; (VLID)5205551
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Antonio Gramsci"s Theories of Cultural Hegemony are used as a methodology to analyze ideological struggles on Weibo in China. Gramsci "s argument is that the Civil Society is the field of negotiations between the state and individuals, where a governing power wins consent to its rule from those it subjugates. In China, the civil society is very weak but since 2012 Weibo has exercised some functions as a "virtual civil society". The author tries to elaborate the political and cultural functions of Weibo in Chinese political context.
BASE
SSRN
Working paper