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Shifting Dynamics of Contention in the Digital Age: Mobile Communication and Politics in China [Kietas viršelis]

(Associate Professor, Department of Communication, University of Copenhagen)
  • Formatas: Hardback, 230 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 159x241x18 mm, weight: 463 g
  • Serija: Studies in Mobile Communication
  • Išleidimo metai: 17-Sep-2020
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0190887265
  • ISBN-13: 9780190887261
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 230 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 159x241x18 mm, weight: 463 g
  • Serija: Studies in Mobile Communication
  • Išleidimo metai: 17-Sep-2020
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0190887265
  • ISBN-13: 9780190887261
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Over the past decades, waves of political contention involving the use of information and communication technologies have swept across the globe. The phenomenon stimulates the scholarship on digital communication technologies and contentious collective action to thrive as an exciting, relevant, but highly fragmentary and contested field with disciplinary boundaries. To advance interdisciplinary understanding, Shifting Dynamics of Contention in the Digital Age outlines a communication-centered framework that articulates the intricate relationship between technology, communication, and contention. It systematically explores the influence of mobile technology on political contention in China, the country with the world's largest number of mobile and internet users. Using first-hand in-depth interview and fieldwork data, Shifting Dynamics of Contention in the Digital Age tracks the strategic choice of mobile phones as repertoires of contention, illustrates the effective mobilization of mobile communication on the basis of its strong and reciprocal social ties, and identifies the communicative practice of forwarding officially alleged "rumors" as a form of everyday resistance. Through this groundbreaking study, Shifting Dynamics of Contention in the Digital Age presents a nuanced portrayal of an emerging dynamics of contention--both its strengths and limitations- through the embedding of mobile communication into Chinese society and politics.

Recenzijos

a compelling study, and a powerful argument * Florian Schneider, China Quarterly * In this excellent book, Jun Liu advocates a communication-centered perspective that highlights how communication in various forms, be it face-to-face, mass communication, or networked communication, may permeate diferent phases of contention and shape the dynamics of contentious politics. With impressive frst-hand feldwork and interview data collected in a period of over 10 years (roughly 20032013), Liu fleshes out his point by systematically examining the infuence of communication,especially mobile communication, on political contention as it unfolds.... The book is an important work with solidempirical findings and theoretical contributions. Scholars interested in communication studies, contentious politics, and China studies will find it particularly useful. * Rongbin Han, Journal of Chinese Political Science * With cases of collective contentions in China, [ Liu] explores how communication practices shape political opportunities, mobilise structure, and frame processes that structure collective contentions. * Jun Zhang, Journal of Contemporary Asia * Jun Liu takes an original approach in this strong contribution to understanding the role of communication in contemporary Chinese politics. Rich empirical discussions bring together different strands of scholarship to elucidate the bigger picture and create a framework that has previously been left mostly implicit. * Elisa Oreglia, King's College London *

Illustrations
xi
Preface xiii
1 Introduction: Movements in Communication
1(24)
The Danger of "Involution"
1(4)
Movements in Communication: A Communication Perspective
5(6)
Bridging ICTs and Contentious Collective Action: Communication as Intermediary
11(6)
Taking the Mobile Phone for Granted in Everyday Life in China
17(4)
Organization of the Book:
Chapter-by-Chapter Outline
21(4)
2 Toward a Synthetic Framework
25(22)
ICTs, Communication, and Dynamics of Contention
26(3)
Bringing Communication to the Fore: A Synthetic, Comparative Framework
29(13)
Conceptualizing and Sensitizing Communication in Contention
29(1)
Communication and Metacommunication in the Articulation of the Dynamics of Contention
30(12)
Methodological Notes
42(5)
3 From Affordances to Repertoires of Contention: The Missing Link in Understanding the Use of (Mobile) Technologies in Contention
47(30)
Linking Affordances and Repertoires of Contention
49(5)
Affordances and Repertoires of Contention: A Clarification of Some Controversial Issues
49(3)
Linking Affordances to Repertoires of Contention
52(2)
Observations from the Field
54(9)
Interpersonal and Digitally Mediated Networked Communications for Contention
55(4)
Mass Communication and the Spread of Political Contention
59(4)
Mobile Phone as Contentious Repertoire: Why Certain Functions but Not Others?
63(11)
Habitus, Affordance, and Formation of the Contentious Repertoire
63(7)
Communication, Metacommunication, Modularity, and Legitimation of Protest Repertoires
70(4)
Conclusion: The Social Construction of Mobile Tech as Repertoire of Contention
74(3)
4 More Than Words: The Integrative Power of the Mobile Phone as a "Reciprocal Technology" for Micromobilization
77(133)
Theoretical and Empirical Blind Spots and Shortcomings
78(3)
What Makes the Mobile Phone Unique? Distinctive Aspects of Mobile Communication
81(4)
Social Ties, Reciprocity, and Guanxi in Mobile Communication for Micromobilization
85(7)
Micromobilization: From Face-to-Face to Mediated Communication
85(2)
Theorizing Reciprocity in Mobilization
87(1)
A Characterization of Reciprocity in Guanxi
88(4)
Mobile Phone Uses and Mobilization: How Do People Get Mobilized?
92(7)
The Cases
93(1)
From Texts to Calls: Mobile Phone Use for Collective Action Mobilization
94(3)
Mobilizing Guanxi via Mobile Phones
97(2)
Beyond Words: Mobile Communication, Reciprocity, and Micromobilization
99(5)
Micromobilization with Immediate Effect
100(1)
Reciprocal Reflexivity as the Mobilization Agent
101(3)
Beyond Homogeneity: Mobile-Mediated "Rhizomatic Networks" and Political Implications
104(3)
Mobile Communication for Micromobilization
107(1)
Mediated Communication, Reciprocity, and Mobilization: Beyond the Case of China
108(2)
5 "To Retweet Each and Every Rumor"--Mobile Rumoring as Contention
110(4)
Rumor: An Ambiguous and Contested Concept
114(1)
A Tale of Two Rumors
114(3)
Bringing Two Approaches Together
117(1)
Contention: A Relevant, Less-acknowledged Dimension of Rumor
118(1)
Rumor Communication in China: Cases
119(2)
Rumor Crackdown as Social Control in Contemporary China
121(3)
To Spread or Not to Spread: Distrust and Disobedience in Rumor Communication
124(1)
"I Would Rather Believe in the Rumor Than the Government's Words": Rumor Communication and Public Distrust
125(2)
"To Retweet Each and Every Rumor": Rumor Communication Against Social Control
127(3)
Rumoring as Contention: Collective Action Frame, Emotion, and Solidarity
130(2)
The Call for Rumoring as a Collective Action Frame
132(2)
Rumoring, Resistance Identity, and Solidarity
134(3)
The Tactics of Mobile Rumoring: The Embedding of the Mobile Phone in Everyday Resistance
137(1)
Mobile, Rumoring, and Everyday Resistance
138(1)
Beyond "Slacktivism"
139(3)
Beyond Rumoring, Beyond China
142(2)
6 Conclusion: Beyond China, Moving Mobile
144(1)
Contentious Politics from the Perspective of Communication
145(3)
Mobile Democracy, or the Embedding of Mobile Phones in Politics in China
148(4)
Censorship and Struggle over Mobile Communication
152(1)
From Local Experience to Global Application: An Illustrated Comparative Study
153(14)
Taking Stock and Moving Mobile
167(2)
Appendix: Methodological Reflections 169(4)
References 173(36)
Index 209
Jun Liu, Associate Professor in the Department of Communication, University of Copenhagen, Denmark.

Jun Liu is Associate Professor in the Department of Communication at the University of Copenhagen, Denmark. His research covers political sociology and communication technologies and publishes in the fields of communication, sociology, political science, and computer science. He has won several awards from The Information Technology and Politics Section of American Political Science Association, the International Communication Association's Mobile Communication Interest Group and the International Communication Association Mobile Preconference.