This book offers an in- depth study of the quasi- political, self-deprecating, and parodic buzzwords and memes prevalent in Chinese online discourse.
Combining discourse analysis with in- depth audience research among the young internet users who deploy these buzzwords in on- and offline contexts, the book explores the historical and social implications of online wordplay for sustaining or challenging the contemporary social order in China. Yanning Huang adopts a combination of media and communications, social anthropology, and socio- linguistic perspectives to shed light on various forms of agency enacted by different social groups in their embracing, negotiation of, or disengagement from online buzzwords, before addressing how the discourses of online wordplay have been co-opted by corporations and party-media.
Offering a rigorous and panoramic analysis of the politics and logics of online wordplay in contemporary China, and providing a critical and nuanced analytical framework for studying digital culture and participation in China and elsewhere, this book will be an important resource for scholars and students of media and communication studies, Internet and digital media studies, discourse analysis, Asian studies, and social anthropology.
This book offers an in-depth study of the quasi-political, self-deprecating and parodic buzzwords and memes prevalent in Chinese online discourse.
Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter 2: The social power of laughter, the dialogic nature of language, and
embodied agency
Chapter 3: Class, gender, and urbanrural divides in China
Chapter 4: A textual reading of Chinese online discourse
Chapter 5: We are all diaosi? The classed practice of self-deprecation
Chapter 6: When straight-men cancer meets spendthrift chicks: A zero-sum
game between mens anxiety and womens fantasy?
Chapter 7: The co-option of Chinese online wordplay
Chapter 8: Conclusion
Yanning Huang is Assistant Professor in the Department of Media and Communication at Xian Jiaotong- Liverpool University, China. He received his doctoral degree from the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE). His research interests include youth and digital culture, audience research, media gender studies, media and social justices, and environmental communication.