Communication, the Nexus of Class and Nation, and Global Divides Reflections on China’s Post-Revolutionary Experiences
Abstract
This paper locates the problematic of communication and global divide in the nexus of class and nation in the context of post-revolutionary China’s twisted developmental path and its world historical economic ascent in the era of neoliberal globalization. After a brief overview of the politics of class mobilization for nation-building during the Maoist period, the paper moves on to examine the role of communication in contributing to reform-era China’s
spectacular rise in the global hierarchy of economic power on the one hand and a drastic
process of domestic social stratification and class polarization on the other. As China’s lower
social classes are making redistributive and social justice claims on the Chinese state and
propelling it to fulfill its socialist promises from within, China’s increasingly denationalized
middle class are protecting this state from the outside by championing Chinese nationalism
in the global symbolic arena. These historically specific re-articulations of class and nation
not only continue to bolster China’s post-revolutionary state in the capitalist global order, but also make it impossible to completely shed its socialist color.
Publisher
Nordic Council of Ministers, Nordicom
Citation
Nordicom Review 30 Jubilee Issue (2009) pp. 91-104
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2009-06Author
Zhao, Yuezhi
Editor
Carlsson, Ulla
Keywords
Class
nation
media
information technologies
China
socialism
Publication type
article, peer reviewed scientific
ISBN
978-91-86523-67-1
Series/Report no.
Nordicom Review
30 Jubilee Issue 2009
Language
eng