creators_name: Yu, H creators_id: H.Yu@utas.edu.au type: article datestamp: 2008-06-11 03:18:39 lastmod: 2008-07-18 10:59:45 metadata_visibility: show title: From active audience to media citizenship: The case of Post-Mao China ispublished: pub subjects: 420304 full_text_status: restricted keywords: Active audience; media storyteller; media citizenship; Internet; journalism; minoritized community; Sun Zhigang; Li Siyi note: The definitive version is available online at http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/content? abstract: This article studies media practices of urban Chinese in order to examine conceptual changes in the notion of citizenship in post-Mao China. It focuses on how the media can cultivate a “rights” consciousness among the populace and how new media have been appropriated as alternative public spaces for articulating alternative political discourses. Through two case studies (the deaths of Sun Zhigang and Li Siyi), I argue that the concept of citizenship can no longer be thought of as a formal and institutional given, but as a concept of fluidity and flexibility that rests on the spatial and subjective positions of the individual in question. New media have been playing an essential role in decentralizing “citizenship.” Active audience participation in online discussions, petitions and protests can influence public opinion, check the authority, and even challenge the political agendas of the government as shown in the abolition of “anti-vagrancy laws” in the case studies. I describe this as the practice of “media citizenship.” It is a sign of empowerment for the awakening “masses” of certain factions of Chinese society for whom participation in the circulation of “lay” knowledge of social and political issues is equivalent to exercising citizenship. date: 2006-06 date_type: published publication: Social Semiotics volume: 16 number: 2 pagerange: 303-326 id_number: 10.1080/10350330600664888 refereed: TRUE issn: 1035-0330 official_url: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10350330600664888 referencetext: . (2002) State control of the Internet in China.. — November [accessed 20 April 2005]. Available from: [your library's links] [your library's links] 2. Ang, I. (1991) Desperately seeking the audience Routledge , New York [your library's links] [your library's links] 3. 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Contexts and implications of investigative journalism in post-Deng China. Journalism Studies 1:2 , pp. 577-597. [your library's links] [your library's links] citation: Yu, H (2006) From active audience to media citizenship: The case of Post-Mao China. Social Semiotics, 16 (2). pp. 303-326. ISSN 1035-0330 document_url: http://eprints.utas.edu.au/6537/1/media_citizenship.pdf