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Mobile Communication and Greater China [Hardback]

Edited by (University of Udine, Italy), Edited by (Hong Kong Polytechnic University), Edited by (Peking University, China), Edited by (Hong Kong Polytechnic University)
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This edited volume is the first book-length study focusing entirely on mobile phone use in China. Drawing on examples from a wide range of contemporary situations in China and beyond, the contributors argue that the mobile phone is in fact an important means by which one can understand a rapidly changing China, and the developing culture of mobile phone usage reflects both the cultural norms and struggle of the people.

Through a theoretical comparison of usage in the West and in China, the editors assert the uniqueness of Chinas experience, highlighting that Chinese society is being exposed simultaneously to a rapid process of industrialization and cyberization. The contributors maintain that such density of experience under a compressed period combined with a thick cultural heritage and a country still under a dictating rule provides a unique situation and offers deep insights into Chinese culture in general.

This work will be of great interest to all students and scholars of Asian communication studies, ICT and Chinese culture and society.
List of illustrations
vii
Notes on contributors ix
Series editors' preface xiii
1 The great mobile revolution and the Chinese encounter: an introduction
1(16)
Rodney Wai-Chi Chu
PART I Overview: from global to China
17(30)
2 From West to East and beyond: main tenets in the studies of the mobile phone
19(14)
Leopoldina Fortunati
3 Riding the double juggernaut: depicting the Chinese mobile communication context
33(14)
Rodney Wai-Chi Chu
PART II Theory, history and comparison
47(66)
4 Mobile communication and the fourth communicative revolution
49(15)
Leopoldina Fortunati
5 The history of the mobile phone in China
64(16)
Jing Wang
Chung-Tai Cheng
6 Comparative development of the mobile Internet in China and Japan
80(16)
Eric Harwit
7 Mobile communication and individualization in Europe and in China
96(17)
Leopoldina Fortunati
Pui-Lam Law
PART III Techno-social interplay: cultural and identity tension
113(46)
8 Mobile networks and civil society: philosophical reflections on organizing social participation in the context of Chinese society
115(13)
Silvia Elaluf-Calderwood
9 Social networks and individualism: some issues on the role of the mobile phone in urban China
128(15)
Boxu Yang
10 The identity and sociability of the mobile phone in China
143(16)
Leopoldina Fortunati
Shanhua Yang
PART IV Exploring the Chineseness of mobile phone use
159(66)
11 College students' self-positioning and mobile phone consumption
161(15)
Jing Song
Shanhua Yang
12 Romance and sexual ideologies in SMS manuals circulating among migrant workers in Southern China
176(13)
Angel Mei-Yi Lin
13 Mobile phone usage in Chinese society
189(13)
Yinni Peng
Rodney Wai-Chi Chu
14 Privatizing public spaces and personalizing private spaces: the challenge of mobile communication in Beijing
202(23)
Boxu Yang
Bo Gai
Li Li
Index 225
Rodney Wai-chi Chu is currently Assistant Professor in the Department of Applied Social Sciences, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University. His research interest is focusing on Chinas modernization, with particular reference to the socio-cultural dimension of ICTs on contemporary Chinese.









Leopoldina Fortunati is Professor of Sociology of Communication and Sociology of Cultural Processes in the Faculty of Educational Sciences at the University of Udine. She has conducted several researches in the field of gender studies, cultural processes and communication technologies.









Pui-lam Law is currently assistant professor in the Department of Applied Social Sciences, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University and visiting research fellow at the Centre for Creative Industries Studies of Peking University. His research interest is on modernity and social development in China.









Shanhua Yang is Professor in the Department of Sociology at Peking University. He conducts field research in various areas of China, including Shanxi, Zhejiang, Hebei, Sichuan, Guangdong, and Shanghai, and has published extensively on rural Chinese society and the lives of rural Chinese, including migrant workers.