It is not merely about life on the screen: urban Chinese youth and the Internet café

The Internet café (wangba) continues to enjoy high popularity among urban Chinese youth, mostly members of China's only-child generation, despite the derogatory connotations the wangba carries, official control and widely diffused access at home. Based on observation at wangbas and in-depth interviews with urban youth, I explore from the Internet café goers’ perspective what wangba going is all about. The study shows that the wangba serves as a heterotopian third place for the goers. They are there, often against the will of various authorities, for a sense of freedom, relaxation, community, and equality as well as fun, which can hardly be found elsewhere in their lives. The meanings they assign to the wangba are closely related to their social-biographical situations as urban only children typically under great parental expectations in a society characterised by sharp social stratification, fierce competition, lack of security, consumerism, corruption and unfairness in the distribution of resources. In this sense, the wangba is seen as a necessary space for existential reasons, in sharp contrast to the negative portrayal of the wangba as a mere den of iniquity in both official and popular discourses.

[1]  Fengshu Liu,et al.  Constructing the autonomous middle-class self in today's China: the case of young-adult only-children university students , 2008 .

[2]  Alexander N. Golub,et al.  “Just Like the Qing Empire” , 2008, Games Cult..

[3]  Larry J. Nelson,et al.  Emerging Adulthood in China: The Role of Social and Cultural Factors , 2007 .

[4]  A. Mclaren Online Intimacy in a Chinese Setting , 2007 .

[5]  Manuel Castells,et al.  Communication Power and Counter-power in the Network Society , 2007 .

[6]  J. Crampton,et al.  Space, Knowledge and Power , 2007 .

[7]  Yuezhi Zhao,et al.  After Mobile Phones , What ? Re-embedding the Social in China ’ s “ Digital Revolution ” , 2007 .

[8]  Fengshu Liu Boys as only‐children and girls as only‐children—parental gendered expectations of the only‐child in the nuclear Chinese family in present‐day China , 2006 .

[9]  H. Brandenburg,et al.  Pathologies of the virtual public sphere , 2006 .

[10]  M.R. Moore,et al.  Multiliteracies for a Digital Age , 2005, IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication.

[11]  HongJunhao,et al.  A split and swaying approach to building information society , 2005 .

[12]  Li Huang,et al.  A split and swaying approach to building information society: The case of Internet cafes in China , 2005, Telematics Informatics.

[13]  Chen Yang,et al.  The Internet in China: A Meta-Review of Research , 2005, Inf. Soc..

[14]  J. Qiu,et al.  Through the Prism of the Internet Cafe , 2005 .

[15]  Catherine Beavis,et al.  LAN cafés: cafés, places of gathering or sites of informal teaching and learning? , 2005 .

[16]  Jill H. Casid Sowing Empire: Landscape And Colonization , 2004 .

[17]  S. Holloway,et al.  ‘NOTHING TO DO, NOWHERE TO GO?’ , 2004 .

[18]  Sara Armstrong,et al.  The New Literacy: The 3 Rs Evolve into the 4 Es. , 2004 .

[19]  Ann S. Anagnost The Corporeal Politics of Quality ( Suzhi ) , 2004 .

[20]  Nicola Burns,et al.  Geographies of exclusion. , 2004, Mental health today.

[21]  Sonia Liff,et al.  Shaping e-Access in the Cybercafé: Networks, Boundaries and Heterotopian Innovation , 2003, New Media Soc..

[22]  Sonia Liff,et al.  Cybercafés: Debating the Meaning and Significance of Internet Access in a Café Environment , 2003, New Media Soc..

[23]  Nina Wakeford,et al.  The Embedding of Local Culture in Global Communication: Independent Internet Cafés in London , 2003, New Media Soc..

[24]  James Stewart,et al.  Nerdy, Trendy or Healthy? Configuring the Internet Café , 2003, New Media Soc..

[25]  Johanna Uotinen,et al.  Involvement in (the Information) Society - The Joensuu Community Resource Centre Netcafé , 2003, New Media Soc..

[26]  B. Street What's 'new' in New Literacy Studies? Critical approaches to literacy in theory and practice , 2003 .

[27]  Jack Linchuan Qiu The Internet in China : Data and Issues , 2003 .

[28]  A. Laegran The petrol station and the Internet café: rural technospaces for youth , 2002 .

[29]  David Wortley Community Informatics: Enabling Communities with Information and Communication Technologies , 2002, Telematics Informatics.

[30]  Sonia Liff,et al.  Community e-gateways: locating networks and learning for social inclusion , 2001 .

[31]  D. Davis The consumer revolution in urban China , 2000, The Journal of Asian Studies.

[32]  Sonia Livingstone,et al.  Young People and New Media: Childhood and the Changing Media Environment , 2000 .

[33]  Peng Fu-chu On Modernity in China , 2000 .

[34]  Borge Bakken,et al.  The Exemplary Society: Human Improvement, Social Control, and the Dangers of Modernity in China , 2000 .

[35]  James Stewart,et al.  Cafematics: The Cybercafe and the Community , 2000 .

[36]  Danny Miller,et al.  The Internet: An Ethnographic Approach , 2000 .

[37]  Ray Oldenburg,et al.  The Great Good Place , 1999 .

[38]  Brian A. McGrail The Badlands of Modernity: Heterotopia and Social Ordering , 1998 .

[39]  Gill Valentine,et al.  Cool places : geographies of youth cultures , 1998 .

[40]  Mayfair M Yang Gifts, Favors, and Banquets: The Art of Social Relationships in China , 1996, The Journal of Asian Studies.

[41]  Andrew B. Kipnis Producing Guanxi: Sentiment, Self, and Subculture in a North China Village , 1997 .

[42]  David Sibley,et al.  Geographies of Exclusion , 1995 .

[43]  M. Foucault,et al.  Of Other Spaces , 1986 .

[44]  T. Gold,et al.  After Comradeship: Personal Relations in China Since the Cultural Revolution , 1985, The China Quarterly.

[45]  J. Habermas The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere , 1962 .