Media Identity and Struggle in Twenty-First-Century China

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<p>How are different groups of people such as sex workers, migrant workers, rural cadres and homosexuals represented in China’s media? How accurately do representations created by the media reflect the lived experiences of Chinese people? Do Chinese people accept the representations and messages disseminated by the media? Can they use the media to portray their own interests? How are media practices in China changing? Have new technologies and increased access to international media opened up new spaces for struggle in China? </p><p>The essays in this volume address these questions by using a combination of ethnography and textual analysis and by exploring representation in and usage of a range of media including instant messaging, the internet, television, films, magazines and newspapers. The essays highlight highlights the richness, diversity, and sometimes contradictory tendencies of the meanings and consequences of media representations in China. The volume cautions against approaches that take the representations created by the media in China at face value and against oversimplified assumptions about the motivations and agency of players in the complex struggles that occur between the media, the Chinese state, and Chinese citizens.</p> <p>Media, Identity, and Struggle in Twenty-First-Century China. Introduction<strong> </strong> <em>Vanessa L. Fong</em> 1. Performing Media-Constructed Images for First-Class Citizenship: Political Struggles of Rural Migrant Hostesses in Dalian<strong> </strong> <em>Tiantian Zheng</em> 2. Migrant Workers in the Pearl River Delta: Discourse and Narratives about Work as Sites of Struggle<strong> </strong> <em>Eric Florence</em> 3. The Paradox of the State-Run Media Promoting Poor Governance in China: Case Studies of a Party Newspaper and an Anticorruption Film<strong> </strong> <em>Rachel Murphy</em> 4. Querying Queer Theory: Debating Male-Male Prostitution in the Chinese Media<strong> </strong> <em>Elaine Jeffreys </em>5. The Internet and the Fragmentation of Chinese Society <em>Jens Damm</em> 6. SMS, Communication, And Citizenship In China's Information Society <em>Kevin Latham </em>7. The New Chinese Citizen and CETV <em>Yingchi Chu</em> </p>
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