The Little Pinks: Self-mobilized Nationalism and State Allies in Chinese Cyberspace

Dublin Core

Title

The Little Pinks: Self-mobilized Nationalism and State Allies in Chinese Cyberspace

Subject

cyber-politics
fandom groups
youth politics
nationalism
authoritarianism
china

Description

Previous studies on cyber politics in China have highlighted the antagonistic relationship between the state and society, either emphasizing on how the state controls online opinions or how the Internet politically empowers individuals.Recent studies went further to reveal the possibility of collaboration between the state and certain online groups. Following the new line of research, this paper presents a case study of the “Little Pinks” and argues that the heterogeneous cyberspace could spontaneously generate netizen groups that may well align and cooperate with the authoritarian regime. The Little Pinksis a group of influential young Chinese netizens who are nationalistic-oriented and readily defend their government online. Although Chinese authorities have attempted to guide and mobilize them, they are at most allies, but never a subsidiary of the government. They have demonstrated astonishing organizational capability in collective actions, which is derived from the vibrant fandom culture in the Chinese cyberspace.

Creator

SHAN, Wei
CHEN, Juan

Source

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CHINA STUDIES; International Journal of China Studies Vol.12 No.1 June 2021; 25-46
2180-3250

Publisher

Institute of China Studies, Universiti Malaya

Date

2022-05-06

Relation

Format

application/pdf

Language

eng

Type

info:eu-repo/semantics/article
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Peer-reviewed Article

Identifier

Citation

Wei SHAN and Juan CHEN, The Little Pinks: Self-mobilized Nationalism and State Allies in Chinese Cyberspace, Institute of China Studies, Universiti Malaya, 2022, accessed May 20, 2024, https://igi.indrastra.com/items/show/2605

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