ABSTRACT

The Chinese internet is driving change across all facets of social life, and scholars have grown mindful that online and offline spaces have become interdependent and inseparable dimensions of social, political, economic, and cultural activity. This book showcases the richness and diversity of Chinese cyberspaces, conceptualizing online and offline China as separate but inter-connected spaces in which a wide array of people and groups act and interact under the gaze of a seemingly monolithic authoritarian state. The cyberspaces comprising "online China" are understood as spaces for interaction and negotiation that influence "offline China". The book argues that these spaces allow their users greater "freedoms" despite ubiquitous control and surveillance by the state authorities. The book is a sequel to the editors’ earlier work, Online Society in China: Creating, Celebrating and Instrumentalising the Online Carnival (Routledge, 2011).

part I|30 pages

Deliberating online spaces

chapter 2|11 pages

Users, not netizens

Spaces and practices on the Chinese Internet

part II|36 pages

Defining online spaces

chapter 3|16 pages

“The corpses were emotionally stable”

Agency and passivity on the Chinese Internet

chapter 4|18 pages

Regarding subjectivities and social life on the screen

The ambivalences of spectatorship in the People's Republic of China

part III|41 pages

Claiming online spaces

part IV|32 pages

Enjoying online spaces

chapter 7|14 pages

Gold farmers and water army

Digital playbour with Chinese characteristics

chapter 8|16 pages

Chinese fansub groups as communities of practice

An ethnography of online language learning

part V|39 pages

Shaping online spaces