ABSTRACT

Despite widespread censorship, China remains an important site of activism. China’s youth, who have grown up in a hyper-mediated environment, deploy creativity as a means to circumvent government-created obstacles and engage in important political conversations. The 2016 air pollution protests in Chengdu, which were quashed in the streets but spread widely online, offer a case study to better understand how youth are employing creative methods to intervene in political talks via image-based interventions or wild public protests, which function as a creative tactic to navigate restricted environments and highlight the importance of dynamic movement to activist efforts.