"Contrary to many Information Age pundits and prognosticators, the working class continues to exist; indeed, in contemporary China, it is being reinvented on a gigantic scale and in a new historical form. ICTs, as Jack Linchuan Qiu shows, constitute a vital and fascinating component of this crucial process. Those who assert that class realities have nothing to do with cellphones and Internet services—and vice versa—will have to think again."
—Dan Schiller, Graduate School of Library and Information Science, University of Illinois Champaign-Urbana
"Jack Linchuan Qiu has written the most insightful, empirically grounded account to date of the social role that the Internet and related information and communication technologies have played in the course of China's rapid economic development. Anyone with an interest in the social and economic implications of the Internet in developing economies—whose citizens make up half of today's Internet users—should read this book."
—William H. Dutton, Director, Oxford Internet Institute, University of Oxford
Product Description
The idea of the "digital divide," the great social division between information haves and have-nots, has dominated policy debates and scholarly analysis since the 1990s. In Working-Class Network Society, Jack Linchuan Qiu describes a more complex social and technological reality in a newly mobile, urbanizing China. Qiu argues that as inexpensive Internet and mobile phone services become available and are closely integrated with the everyday work and life of low-income communities, they provide a critical seedbed for the emergence of a new working class of "network labor" crucial to China's economic boom. Between the haves and have-nots, writes Qiu, are the information "have-less": migrants, laid-off workers, micro-entrepreneurs, retirees, youth, and others, increasingly connected by cybercafés, prepaid service, and used mobile phones. A process of class formation has begun that has important implications for working-class network society in China and beyond.
Qiu brings class back into the scholarly discussion, not as a secondary factor but as an essential dimension in our understanding of communication technology as it is shaped in the vast, industrializing society of China. Basing his analysis on his more than five years of empirical research conducted in twenty cities, Qiu examines technology and class, networked connectivity and public policy, in the context of massive urban reforms that affect the new working class disproportionately. The transformation of Chinese society, writes Qiu, is emblematic of the new technosocial reality emerging in much of the Global South.
Information Revolution and Global Politics series
Jack Linchuan Qiu is Assistant Professor at the School of Journalism and Communication at Chinese University of Hong Kong. He is a coauthor (with Manuel Castells, Mireia Fernández-Ardèvol, and Araba Sey) of Mobile Communication and Society: A Global Perspective (MIT Press, 2006).
Manuel Castells is Professor of Communication and the Wallis Annenberg Chair in Communication Technology and Society at the Annenberg School for Communication, University of Southern California, as well as Professor Emeritus of Sociology and Planning at the University of California, Berkeley, Research Professor at the Open University of Catalonia, and Marvin and Joanne Grossman Distinguished Visiting Professor of Technology and Society at MIT. He is the author of, among other books, the three-volume work The Information Age: Economy, Society, and Culture.
大体可以总结为:1)以网吧、廉价手机服务为代表的中低端信息传播技术深入信息中下层的日常生活与工作。2)信息服务、硬件提供商的商业逻辑并不一定能够提供有利于信息中下阶层的发展的创新与服务。信息中下阶层也并不一定能够合理有效地使用信息服务。3)信息中下阶层通过软硬...
评分《信息时代的世界工厂:新工人阶级的网络社会》这本书是香港中文大学新闻与传播学院副教授邱林川于2013年9月出版的著作。从书名中,作者把中国描述为“世界工厂”,在逐渐信息化、现代化的中国社会,工人阶级也演化出另一种形态“新工人阶级”。“新工人阶级”与原有的“工人阶...
评分大体可以总结为:1)以网吧、廉价手机服务为代表的中低端信息传播技术深入信息中下层的日常生活与工作。2)信息服务、硬件提供商的商业逻辑并不一定能够提供有利于信息中下阶层的发展的创新与服务。信息中下阶层也并不一定能够合理有效地使用信息服务。3)信息中下阶层通过软硬...
评分这本书的学术态度严谨得近乎苛刻,但阅读体验却出乎意料地具有冲击力。它不仅仅是在“描述”问题,更是在“质问”我们社会的基本运行逻辑。我特别欣赏作者在处理技术变革与社会固化关系时的那种辩证视角。他没有将技术视为万能的救赎,也没有将其描绘成纯粹的压迫工具,而是将其置于权力结构和既有利益分配的框架下进行审视。这种审慎的态度,使得书中的论点具有了长久的生命力,而不是昙花一现的热点评论。对我而言,它提供了一个极佳的思考工具,用以拆解那些看似中立、实则带有强烈意识形态偏见的公共话语。读完后,我发现自己对新闻报道和政策解读的警惕性大大提高,不再轻易相信那些简化的“效率提升”口号,而是开始追问:谁的效率提升了?谁为此付出了隐性的成本?这本书像是一剂清醒剂,让人无法再以麻木的姿态面对周遭的变迁。
评分这本书的叙事节奏,简直像一出紧凑的黑色电影,每一个章节都充满了意想不到的转折和令人不安的现实回响。我被那种近乎冷酷的客观性所吸引,它没有试图美化或煽情,而是直接将我们抛入一个充满矛盾和不确定性的世界。特别是在探讨社区结构如何在新旧经济模式交替中瓦解与重塑的部分,作者的分析犹如一把精密的解剖刀,剖开了那些藏在光鲜数据背后的社会断裂层。我发现,许多我过去认为理所当然的社会关系,在作者的梳理下,展现出其内在的脆弱性和功利性。这种对社会关系的“去浪漫化”处理,虽然让人感到一丝寒意,但同时也带来了一种清醒的力量。读完后,我忍不住会去观察身边那些默默无闻的邻居和同事,试图在他们的日常互动中,寻找作者所描绘的那些隐秘的“连接”与“断裂”的痕迹。它成功地将宏大的社会结构分析,巧妙地植入到了微观的个体经验之中,这种平衡拿捏得相当到位。
评分这本书,初读起来,感觉像是走进了一个迷宫,但这个迷宫却是由日常生活的碎屑和工业时代的幽灵共同编织而成。作者的笔触极其细腻,对那些被主流叙事边缘化的群体——那些在流水线上劳作、在钢筋水泥的丛林中挣扎求存的工薪阶层——的观察入木三分。我尤其欣赏他对“网络化”这一概念的解构,它不再是高科技精英的专属词汇,而是渗透到了每一个底层逻辑的肌理之中。那种在现实困境中,人们如何利用有限的资源搭建起临时的、脆弱的互助网络,那种为了生计而不得不进行的“数字游牧”,读起来让人既感到心酸,又充满了一种原始的生命力。书中对于劳动异化和身份认同危机探讨的深度,远远超出了我对社会学著作的预期,它更像是一部写给沉默大多数人的史诗,充满了对被遗忘者的深沉关怀和锐利批判。它迫使我重新审视我们习以为常的“进步”的代价,以及那些构建起现代社会基石的普通人的无声抗争。
评分这本书最让我感到震撼的是它对“流动性”的刻画——不是物质上的流动,而是社会能见度和身份认同的漂移。作者通过一系列极具穿透力的观察,揭示了在现代社会结构中,即便是最基础的“稳定感”也变得极其奢侈和稀有。那些被技术进步抛下的群体,他们所构建的“社群网络”,其本质上是对抗结构性遗忘的一种本能反应。我特别喜欢作者在分析中偶尔流露出的那种冷静的悲悯,它既不提供廉价的希望,也不沉溺于绝望的控诉,而是坚持将焦点放在“如何理解正在发生的结构性挤压”这一核心问题上。这本书的语言风格多变,时而像冷峻的报告文学,时而又带有某种哲学思辨的重量感,这使得阅读体验充满了层次感。它最终留给读者的,不是一个清晰的答案,而是一系列更深刻、更难缠的问题,关于我们在一个日益“连接”却又日益“疏离”的世界中,如何安放自己的存在。
评分坦白说,一开始我对这种主题持保留态度,总觉得社会学类的书籍容易陷入晦涩的术语泥沼,但这位作者的文字功底极为扎实,更像是一位训练有素的田野调查者,而非高居象牙塔的理论家。他娴熟地运用了大量的案例和口述史料,让那些抽象的理论具备了血肉和温度。我印象最深的是其中关于“技能贬值”和“代际差异”的论述,那种描述老一代工人如何在新媒体和零工经济的冲击下,努力保持尊严和知识传承的场景,极其具有画面感。它探讨的不是简单的贫富差距,而是更深层次的“意义危机”——当一个人赖以为生的技能不再被社会需要时,他如何重新定义自己的存在价值?这种对个体意义追寻的关注,使得全书的立意拔高了一层,避免了落入简单的经济决定论的窠臼。阅读过程是需要耐心的,但每一次深入,都会收获对复杂现实更精妙的理解。
评分ICT与人文关怀
评分读的中译,应该快出了
评分匆匆翻完,三星差一点。被压迫被损害的群体可以利用新的技术手段,形成新的身份、引发社会变革。作者显然想将技术手段与新工人阶级诞生联系起来。可是完全没有超出马克思说的资本主义是自己的掘墓人的逻辑啊,仅仅提供了一些老掉牙的例子。对于远景的判断,作者的态度左右摇摆,莫衷一是。
评分读的中译,应该快出了
评分ICT与人文关怀
本站所有内容均为互联网搜索引擎提供的公开搜索信息,本站不存储任何数据与内容,任何内容与数据均与本站无关,如有需要请联系相关搜索引擎包括但不限于百度,google,bing,sogou 等
© 2026 book.quotespace.org All Rights Reserved. 小美书屋 版权所有