Urban Youth in China

Front Cover
Routledge, Jan 25, 2011 - Family & Relationships - 238 pages

Fengshu Liu situates the lives of Chinese youth and the growth of the Internet against the backdrop of rapid and profound social transformation in China. In 2008, the total of Internet users in China had reached 253 million (in comparison with 22.5 million in 2001). Yet, despite rapid growth, the Internet in China is so far a predominantly urban-youth phenomenon, with young people under thirty (especially those under twenty-four), mostly members of the only-child generation, as the main group of the netizens’ population. As both youth and the Internet hold the potential to inflict, or at least contribute to, far-reaching economic, social, cultural, and political changes, this book fulfills a pressing need for a systematical investigation of how youth and the Internet are interacting with each other in a Chinese context. In so doing, Liu sheds light on what it means to be a Chinese today, how ‘Chineseness’ may be (re)constructed in the Internet Age, and what the implications of the emerging form of identity are for contemporary and future Chinese societies as well as the world.

 

Contents

Introduction
1
1 Social Transformation in China 19792010
15
2 The Internet with Chinese Characteristics
35
Urban Youth with Chinese Characteristics
57
IandtheInternet Narratives from Members of Chinas Net Generation
78
5 Internet Anxiety the Norm of the Good Netizen and the Construction of the Proper Wired Self
102
Chinese Urban Youth and the Net Café
120
7 The Balinghous Collective Narrative in an Online Forum
140
Chinese Young People Negotiating the Political Self in the Internet Age
161
Modernity the Internet and the Self
180
Notes
199
References
203
Index
221
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About the author (2011)

Fengshu Liu is a postdoctoral research fellow at the Institute of Educational Research, University of Oslo.