Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/58361
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Type: Journal article
Title: The rise of a 'Me Culture' in postsocialist China: Youth, individualism and identity creation in the blogosphere
Author: Sima, Y.
Pugsley, P.
Citation: The International Communication Gazette, 2010; 72(3):287-306
Publisher: Sage Publications Ltd.
Issue Date: 2010
ISSN: 1748-0485
1748-0493
Statement of
Responsibility: 
Yangzi Sima and Peter C. Pugsley
Abstract: China’s ‘Generation Y’ are the first to grow up with computer technology and the Internet. More affluent and better educated than their parents, and often the only child in the family, they consider individuality a highly sought-after quality, which has given rise to a ‘me culture’ primarily concerned with self-expression and identity exhibition. Drawing from a combined content and discourse analysis in conjunction with personal interviews with Chinese Gen Y bloggers, this study seeks to provide a qualitative examination of Chinese youth and their use of personal blogs. It fills a lacuna in current studies that focus largely on blogging in western contexts. The study elucidates how China’s youth use blogs in their own symbolic identity construction and self-presentation based around notions of individualism and consumerism – key features of China’s entry into its post- socialist age – and probes the motivations behind their blogging practices.
Keywords: blog
China
computer-mediated communication
identity
individuality
Internet
new media
postsocialist
self-presentation
virtual ethnography
youth
Rights: © The Author(s), 2010
DOI: 10.1177/1748048509356952
Published version: http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1748048509356952
Appears in Collections:Aurora harvest 5
Media Studies publications

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