Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

Digitalisation of Memory Practices in China: Contesting the Curating State [Kõva köide]

Edited by (University of Bonn), Edited by (University of Bonn)
  • Formaat: Hardback, 286 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, 1 Tables, black and white; 11 Illustrations, black and white
  • Ilmumisaeg: 29-Sep-2025
  • Kirjastus: Bristol University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1529253594
  • ISBN-13: 9781529253597
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 286 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, 1 Tables, black and white; 11 Illustrations, black and white
  • Ilmumisaeg: 29-Sep-2025
  • Kirjastus: Bristol University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1529253594
  • ISBN-13: 9781529253597
Teised raamatud teemal:
How is memory in China curated in the digital era?



This pioneering volume investigates the transformation of collective memory in China amid rapid technological change.



Introducing the concept of the curating state, it reveals how digitalisation both supports and challenges official memories, giving rise to more hybrid and, at times, democratised memory practices. Bringing together leading Chinese and international scholars, the book examines the use of digital tools by state, private and commercial actors to curate their own versions of the past.



Combining theoretical innovation with rich empirical research, this is a vital resource for understanding the dynamic interplay between memory, media and power in contemporary Chinaand beyond.

Arvustused

Memory practices have been instrumental to the building of all modern nation-states, but they remain particularly sensitive for the state of a nation such as the Peoples Republic of China. Taking the encompassing curating power of the authoritarian party-state seriously while exploring the extant wriggle room of marginal non-state actors for leveraging information technologies to shape collective memories and heritage is a most daunting, but highly important task. Readers will find the scholarship assembled in this volume methodologically rich, conceptually innovative and in its scope truly Chinese global. Ralph Weber, University of Basel









In an era where digital technologies transform how societies remember and forget, this groundbreaking volume offers an incredibly valuable interdisciplinary analysis of how digitisation is reshaping memory and heritage practices in China, revealing a dynamic battleground where official narratives collide with grassroots remembrance, market forces and digital media infrastructures.



Conceptualizing the Chinese state as a curating state, the book explores how digitalisation both strengthens and disrupts its control over collective memory. On the one hand, the state has emerged as a powerful curator of the pastshaping narratives, controlling archives, and erasing inconvenient histories. On the other hand, as digital platforms multiply, so do the voices challenging and contesting the states effort to curate memory. Activists, netizens and private archivists leverage digital tools to contest state-sanctioned histories, creating alternative archives and subversive memory practices.



Interdisciplinary in scope, The Digitalisation of Memory Practices in China bridges political science, media studies, memory research and cultural analysis. Engaging and timely, its chapters invite readers to rethink how power operates in the digital agenot just in China, but in many other societies where the struggle over memory is increasingly waged online. This is a must read for anyone interested in China studies, digital authoritarianism and memory politics. Rongbin Han, University of Georgia In the digital age, memories are no longer forgotten but fragmented, contested or even artificially remade. Examining these pluriversal and contrapuntal dynamics, The Digitalisation of Memory Practices in China reveals the limits of the state's curatorial power. Its legitimacy, premised on multi-ethnic unity, is reworked by the very groups it designates, while its (colonial) modernity privileges images of democracy and welfare. This book unravels how memory governance both sustains and undermines state authority in surprising ways. Shih Chih-Yu, Tongji University









The Digitalisation of Memory Practices in China offers a powerful reconceptualisation of how collective memory is shaped, challenged and reimagined in an authoritarian context. At its core is the innovative notion of the curating statea framework that not only captures the selective and performative nature of state memory-making, but also exposes the ways in which digital technologies open up curatorial agency beyond official institutions. This volume demonstrates that memory in China is not monolithic but hybrid and contested, shaped through a dynamic interplay of censorship, commercialisation, digital infrastructures and grassroots interventions. With its impressive range of case studies and conceptual clarity, the book makes a landmark contribution not only to China studies, but to the broader fields of digital memory studies and global memory politics. Silvana Mandolessi, KU Leuven

Introduction: The Digitalisation of Curating Collective Memories and
Heritage in China - Maximilian Mayer and Frederik Schmitz


1. From the Archive to the Public Sphere: The Digital Rebirth of an
Underground Journal - Ian Johnson


2. How Do Netizens Remember? Digital Memory Work in the History of the
Chinese Internet - Guobin Yang


3. Digital Memory and Islam in China: Archiving Arab style Mosques on
Social Media - Vivien Markert


4. Mediating Queer Memory in Chinese Digital Video Documentaries - Hongwei
Bao


5. Resistance of the Stone and Fragmented Digital Collective Memory in Gulou,
China - Florence Graezer Bideau


6. Minitrue in Action: Contesting Correct Collective Memory on Chinese
Social Media - Hongtao Li


7. Curating the Real Xinjiang: Hyperreal Spectacles and the Making of
Collective Memory - David OBrien and Melissa Shani Brown


8. Assembling Digital Memories: The Curation of Baiku Yao Costumes - Linjie
Wang


9. Curating the Rural: Douyins Rural Guardians and Platformised
Memory-making - Antonie Angerer and Elena Meyer-Clement


10. Potato Patriotism: Consuming War Memory in China - Frederik Schmitz


11. Smart Museums, Heritage and Curation: An Empirical Study in Hangzhou,
China - Xihuan Hu


12. Digital Documentaries, Making Memory, Solitary Spectatorship - Margaret
Hillenbrand


Conclusion: Chinas Evolving Curatorial Practices - Maximilian Mayer and
Frederik Schmitz
Maximilian Mayer is Junior-Professor of International Relations and Global Politics of Technology at University of Bonn.









Frederik Schmitz is Research Fellow and PhD student at the University of Bonn.