Table of contents : Cover Half Title Page Title Page Copyright Contents Acknowledgments Half Title Page Introduction Acknowledgments Introduction Network Privacy, Cyber-nationalism, and the Network Market The Internet as Discursive Fields: A Theoretical Framework The Internet for Critical Discourses: Method Outline of the Book The Web of Meaning: A New Approach 1. The Internet and Social Change in China New Cultural Subjects: Shamate and Diaosi Discursive Articulation Forms of Internet Sociality Internet Events Conclusion 2. The Rise of the Internet as Symbolic Space The Structural Transformation of the Cultural Realm The Rise of the Internet as Symbolic Space The Public Realm and Many Publics Symbolic Power and Symbolic Transactions Conclusion 3. Assembling Network Privacy Practices and Values of Privacy in Chinese Society Privacy as a Web of Meaning in the Mediated Lifeworld Privacy with Family Resemblance Privacy as Personal Boundary Privacy in Public Domains Privacy in Socio-Technological Domains Conclusion 4. Articulating Cyber-nationalism Cyber-nationalism in China Nationalism as Cultural Identification Nationalism as a Consequence of Neoliberal Development and Subgroup Identification Nationalism in Globalization Conclusion CHAPTER APPENDIX Methodology, Topic Groups, and Keywords from Sina Weibo Postings on the Diaoyu Islands Dispute 5. Constructing the Network Market Alibaba: The Bazaar on the Internet The Internet + : The Constellation of State and Market Mass Entrepreneurship and Mass Innovation: Production and Consumption Fake Goods: Lifeworld versus System World Conclusion Conclusion Discourses of Social Change From the Public Sphere to Discursive Fields References Index