Abstract
In this chapter, we analyze the data collected through in-depth interviews of migrant workers in southern China about their mobile cultures. In particular, we focus on understanding the role that mobile cultures play in female workers’ negotiation of their social and romantic relations, leisure space, and how these negotiations are directly or indirectly facilitated by development of informal literacies through their frequent SMS communicative practices. These will help us understand the lifestyle aspirations and life trajectories of the new young working women in China, who are experiencing the most rapid socioeconomic changes in society and negotiating their ways of life amid much tension between old and new values governing lifestyle aspirations and familial and gender relations.
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Notes
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- 2.
An initial figure obtained from an unpublished project of Law on the situation of migrant workers in China
- 3.
“Thumb Economy” Earned 9 Billion, Mingpao Daily (2003, September 14), B6.
- 4.
“Thumb Economy” Earned 9 Billion, Mingpao Daily (September 14, 2003), B6.
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Acknowledgments
The authors are indebted to Pui-lam Law, Jing Wang, Ke Yang, Xiaojing Liu, and Yinni Peng for their valuable work in collecting the interview data for this study. Special thanks also go to the anonymous reviewers for their very useful comments and suggestions.
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Lin, A.My., Tong, A.H.M. (2012). Mobile Cultures of Migrant Workers in Southern China: Informal Literacies in the Negotiation of (New) Social Relations of the New Working Women. In: Law, Pl. (eds) New Connectivities in China. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-3910-9_7
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