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Bookbot

Johan Lagerkvist

    C-Systeme
    After the internet, before democracy
    Tiananmen redux
    Organized Loyalty
    • 2023

      Organized Loyalty

      A New State Ideology for China as a Global Power

      • 124pages
      • 5 heures de lecture

      The book examines the ideology developed by Xi Jinping during his leadership, highlighting how his political thought has shaped China's domestic and foreign policies from 2012 to 2022. It emphasizes the superpower rivalry with the United States and the global implications of China's ideological transformation. Through an analysis of Xi's speeches, it identifies loyalty, discipline, and greatness as core concepts of his state ideology. The text also critiques the assumption that enforced loyalty will eliminate the emergence of disloyalty within society, suggesting a complex political landscape.

      Organized Loyalty
    • 2016

      Tiananmen redux

      The hard truth about the expanded neoliberal world order

      • 363pages
      • 13 heures de lecture

      This book contends that the massacre of civilians in Beijing on June Fourth 1989 was a pivotal rupture in both Chinese and world history. If not for that day, China’s socioeconomic, political and cultural landscape would not have undergone the kind of dramatic transformation that has made China rich but unequal, open but hyper-nationalist, moralistic but immoral and unhappy. Through the lens of global history the book revisits the drama of Tiananmen and demonstrates how it unfolded, ended, and ultimately how that ending – in a consensus of forgetting – came to shape the world of the 21st century. It offers a theorization on the inclusion of China into global capitalism and argues that the planetary project of neoliberalism has been prolonged by China’s market reforms. This has resulted in an ongoing convergence of economic and authoritarian political practices that transcend otherwise contrasting political systems. With China’s growing global influence, the late leader Deng Xiaoping’s statement that «development is a hard truth» increasingly conveys the logic of our contemporary world.

      Tiananmen redux
    • 2010

      After the internet, before democracy

      Competing Norms in Chinese Media and Society

      China has lived with the Internet for nearly two decades. Will increased Internet use, with new possibilities to share information and discuss news and politics, lead to democracy, or will it to the contrary sustain a nationalist supported authoritarianism that may eventually contest the global information order? This book takes stock of the ongoing tug of war between state power and civil society on and off the Internet, a phenomenon that is fast becoming the centerpiece in the Chinese Communist Party’s struggle to stay in power indefinitely. It interrogates the dynamics of this enduring contestation, before democracy, by following how Chinese society travels from getting access to the Internet to our time having the world’s largest Internet population. Pursuing the rationale of Internet regulation, the rise of the Chinese blogosphere and citizen journalism, Internet irony, online propaganda, the relation between state and popular nationalism, and finally the role of social media to bring about China’s democratization, this book offers a fresh and provocative perspective on the arguable role of media technologies in the process of democratization, by applying social norm theory to illuminate the competition between the Party-state norm and the youth/subaltern norm in Chinese media and society.

      After the internet, before democracy
    • 2009