ABSTRACT
WeChat (the international version of Weixin), launched in 2012, has rapidly become the most favoured Chinese social media. Globally available, equally popular both inside and outside China and widely adopted by Chinese migrants, WeChat has fundamentally changed the ways in which Mandarin-speaking migrants conduct personal messaging, engage in group communication and community business activities, produce and distribute news, and access and share information. This book explores a wide range of issues connected to the ways in which WeChat works and is used, across the world among the newest members of the Chinese diaspora. Arguing that digital/social media afford a great degree of individual agency, as well as a collective capacity for sustaining an ‘imagined community’, the book shows how WeChat’s assemblage of infrastructure and regulatory frameworks, technical capabilities, content and sense of community has led to the construction of a particular kind of diasporic Chinese world, at a time marked both by China’s rise, and anxiety about Chinese influence in the West.
Chapter 2 of this book is freely available as a downloadable Open Access PDF at https://www.taylorfrancis.com under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC-BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|60 pages
Infrastructure, regulatory frameworks, business and industries
chapter 2|19 pages
WeChat as migration infrastructure
chapter 3|20 pages
From ethnic media to ethno-transnational media
part II|38 pages
Technological tendencies, affordances, and relations
chapter 5|20 pages
“Canary in the coal mine”
part III|54 pages
Content, narratives, discourses
chapter 1166|30 pages
WeChatting American politics
chapter 7|22 pages
WeChat for Chinese speakers in Brazil
part IV|95 pages
Identity, sentiments, emotions and affect