Participatory censorship: How online fandom community facilitates authoritarian rule

Author:

Luo Zhifan1ORCID,Li Muyang2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Concordia University, Canada

2. York University, Canada

Abstract

Following a burgeoning literature on private actors under digital authoritarianism, this study aims to understand the role played by social media users in sustaining authoritarian rule. It examines a subcultural community—the queer-fantasy community—on Chinese social media to expound how members of this community interpreted China’s censorship policy, interacted based on the interpretation, and participated in censorship. Integrating structural topic modeling and emergent coding, this study finds that a political environment of uncertainty fostered divergent imaginaries about censorship. These imaginaries encouraged participatory censorship within the online community, which strengthened the political control of the Internet in the absence of the state. This study illuminates how participatory censorship works, especially in non-professional and non-politically mobilized online communities. With a focus on social media users, it also offers a lens for future research to compare peer-based surveillance and content moderation in authoritarian and democratic contexts.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Sociology and Political Science,Communication

Reference45 articles.

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2. Chen P (2020) Negotiating queer fantasy and the normative: boys’ love stories fandom in China. Available at: https://china.usc.edu/negotiating-queer-fantasy-and-normative-boys%E2%80%99-love-stories-fandom-china (accessed 7 November 2021).

3. What is a flag for? Social media reporting tools and the vocabulary of complaint

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