This book is a collection of eight chapters that examine new media and contemporary Chinese politics based on an analysis of twelve major microblog entries from 2011 to 2012, most of which are still relevant to the present day and the new age of WeChat.
It explores how the new media both informs and deforms the ideology. It also discusses how today’s mass migration and the “de-regionalization” of floating populations around the globe, and the accompanying urbanization, the rapid disappearance of rural communities, and the reconstruction of urban-rural relations, as well as the rise in refugee flows and terrorism are all leading to new, large-scale social unrest worldwide.
Introduction “The End of the Age of Microblogs”:New Media and Contemporary Chinese Politics.- Violence, Terrorism and the Marketization of (New) Media.- Do “democratic” business and its future belong to digital commerce empires?.- “Human is the sum of all data”: The Labor Theory of Value and “Re-Proletarianization”.- Politically Ceiling or Lifeline?.- Whom to blame for the death of news: Advertisement and journalism.- The “Socialization” of Media and the new “Enclosure Movement”: Platform monopoly and hegemony.- The Paradox of mainstream media: “Mass line” and marketization of public opinions.- New Media’s Arena: Macroscopic-Policies’ Contest, or a Win-Win Result?.- Conclusion, “Archaeologies of the Future” in New Media Era.
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