Document detail

Let 100 voices speak: how the internet is transforming China and changing everything

London: Tauris (2015), 212 pp., glossary p.201-205, index
ISBN 978-1-78076-985-1; 1-78076-985-7
"Despite being a heavily-censored society, China has over 560 million active internet users, more than double that of the USA. In this book, social media expert and China-watcher Liz Carter tells the story of how the internet in China is leading to a coming together of activists, ordinary people and cultural trendsetters on a scale unknown in modern history. News about protests and natural disasters, or gossip and satirical jokes, are practically uncensorable and spread quickly through Weibo – the Chinese Twitter - and the Chinese internet underground. More than that, a grassroots, foundational shift of assumptions and expectations is taking place, as Chinese men and women cast off the communist era ‘stability at all costs’ mantra and find new forms of selfexpression, creativity and communication with the world." (Publisher)
Contents
1 Cover-ups and uncoverings, 7
2 Censorship is the mother of subversion, 27
3 Tectonic shifts: counterculture online, 63
4 Not in my backyard: from screens to streets, 99
5 I fought the law, 125
6 The crackdown and the Chinese dream, 155