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Book Cover
E-book
Author Xu, Xuanzi.

Title Online news-prompted public spheres in China / Xuanzi Xu
Published Cham, Switzerland : Palgrave Macmillan, 2022
©2022

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Description 1 online resource (xix, 200 pages)
Contents Introduction -- The Theory of News-Prompted Public Spheres and their Features -- The Application of Public Sphere Theory in China -- Structural Factors Fostering China's Online News-Prompted Publics -- Everyday News-Prompted Publics on WeChat -- Surprise -- Ephemerality -- Networked Public Spheres -- Rethinking Online News-Prompted Public Spheres
Summary This book argues that there are constant formations of online public spheres in present-day China, prompted by never-ending news. It contends that these publics are chronic, although individually they are usually transient. They are networked, which enables them to go viral in hours, and they may engender unexpected consequences. These features explain why online public spheres survive in China even though censorship and information manipulation are pervasively and strategically maneuvered to guide or manufacture "public opinion." The book also proposes that there are deeply entangled structural factors bolstering China's online news-prompted public spheres: the continuous flow of news information, the countless public spaces facilitated by Chinas digital infrastructure and the rise of rights-conscious netizens. Pushing forward a new way of conceptualizing the idea of public spheres, this book contends clearly that public spheres are most often sparked by chronic news in today's media-saturated societies. Delving into the life cycles of public spheres, it goes beyond static analysis of individual public spheres and instead studies their five qualities, which, except for the networked quality, have never been systematically addressed in scholarship. Xuanzi Xu completed her PhD at the University of Sydney, Australia, and her MA at the Sorbonne University, France. Her research focuses on how the everyday news participation of ordinary Chinese Internet users contributes to the formation of online public spheres in China. More broadly, she is interested in the interplay between ICT, civil society and the state, and is keen to explore the political implication of the unfinished information revolution
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Print version record
Subject News Web sites -- China
Electronic discussion groups -- China
Digital media -- China
Digital media
Electronic discussion groups
News Web sites
China
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9783031121562
3031121562