Social Media in Industrial China

Described as the biggest migration in human history, an estimated 250 million Chinese people have left their villages in recent decades to live and work in urban areas. Xinyuan Wang spent 15 months living among a community of these migrants in a small factory town in southeast China to track their u...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Why We Post
:
Year of Publication:2016
Language:English
Series:Why We Post
Physical Description:1 electronic resource (236 p.)
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Described as the biggest migration in human history, an estimated 250 million Chinese people have left their villages in recent decades to live and work in urban areas. Xinyuan Wang spent 15 months living among a community of these migrants in a small factory town in southeast China to track their use of social media. It was here she witnessed a second migration taking place: a movement from offline to online. As Wang argues, this is not simply a convenient analogy but represents the convergence of two phenomena as profound and consequential as each other, where the online world now provides a home for the migrant workers who feel otherwise ‘homeless’.
Hierarchical level:Monograph