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J Cheng, XX Cheng, Xiaoxiao Malaise Effect or
Virtuous Effect? The Dynamics of Internet Use and Political Trust in China
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION English Article
Internet use; political trust; dynamic relationship;
social-historical and Internet context; media effects NEWS CONSUMPTION; MEDIA;
GOVERNMENT; TRANSFORMATION; CONSEQUENCES; PERFORMANCE; TELEVISION; GENERATION;
RELEVANCE; SOCIETIES The rise of the Internet has led to debates regarding the
direction of its effect in terms of eroding or enhancing political trust. The
current study considers the dispute and focuses on the dynamic relationship between
Internet use and political trust in China. The multilevel analysis with pooled data
shows that the impacts of Internet use on political trust vary across generations
and that the changing social-historical context and Internet context are
responsible for the dynamic Internet-trust relationship. This article also bridges
the gap in existing theory by showing that both the malaise effect of Internet use
and virtuous effect of Internet context act together to impact political trust.
[Cheng, Xiaoxiao] Tsinghua Univ, Beijing, Peoples R China Cheng, XX
(corresponding author), Tsinghua Univ, Beijing, Peoples R China.
alfonsocheng10@gmail.com Cheng, Xiaoxiao/ABA-6326-2020 China's
State Major Research Projects [2016ZX08015002] China's State Major Research
Projects This research was financed by China's State Major Research Projects
under Grant Number 2016ZX08015002. I thank Jianbin Jin and Taiquan Peng for their
valuable guidance and insightful comments. I greatly appreciate the support from
teachers and colleagues in the Department of Communication at Michigan State
University and James W. Dearing in particular, who has hosted me as a year-long
visiting scholar during the iterations of this article over the past year. Many
thanks also to the anonymous reviewers for providing constructive feedback. The
Online Appendix for this article can be accessed at
https://figshare.com/s/180b8013c86b105aa3e4 87 1 1 2 13
USC ANNENBERG PRESS LOS ANGELES UNIV SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA, KERCKHOFF HALL,
734 W ADAMS BLVD, MC7725, LOS ANGELES, CA 90089 USA 1932-8036 INT J
COMMUN-US Int. J. Commun. 2020 14 1995
2016 22 Communication Social Science
Citation Index (SSCI) Communication LD1CX 2022-06-16
WOS:000525770900013
J Osuri, G Osuri, Goldie #Kashmir 2016:
Notes toward a media ecology of an occupied zone SOUTH ASIAN POPULAR CULTURE
English Article Social Media;
affective publics; media ecology; Kashmir; self-determination; India This
paper explores the necessity of understanding contemporary Kashmiri contestations
of hegemonic Indian state, media and social media discourses through a media
ecology framework. In recent years, there has been a proliferation of Kashmiri
usage of social media. Analysis of this usage offers an insight into the ways in
which Kashmiris and their allies have been able to offer counter-narratives to
Indian state and media narratives which have historically underreported, even
silenced, dissenting Kashmiri perspectives. A media ecology framework also conveys
a sense of the affective publics as Papacharissi notes, involved in deeply
polarized debates regarding the relationship between the Indian nation-state and
the region of Kashmir (5). Building on an earlier cultural representation
framework, this paper argues for a media ecology framework as a way of
understanding evolving polarized discourses in the context of Kashmir as an
occupied zone. [Osuri, Goldie] Univ Warwick, Dept Sociol, Coventry, W Midlands,
England Osuri, G (corresponding author), Univ Warwick, Dept Sociol,
Coventry, W Midlands, England. g.osuri@warwick.ac.uk
69 1 1 0 0 ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
ABINGDON 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
1474-6689 1474-6697 S ASIAN POPUL CULT S. Asian Pop. Cult.
MAY 4 2019 17 2 111 131
10.1080/14746689.2019.1612554 http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14746689.2019.1612554
21 Cultural Studies; Asian Studies Emerging Sources Citation
Index (ESCI) Cultural Studies; Asian Studies VK2IX
2022-06-16 WOS:000667326400001

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