2018
DOI: 10.1111/aman.13152
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Strangership and Social Media: Moral Imaginaries of Gendered Strangers in Rural China

Abstract: The stranger" has been a recurring figure in anthropology and sociology, often taken to represent the antithesis of kinship and friendship, or as personifying the anomie of contemporary social life. Drawing on participant observation documenting interactions with strangers occurring on social media in a rural Chinese town, I demonstrate how online stranger relations happening therein rework existing boundaries between friends and strangers while also assuming uniquely gendered qualities. This fuels social imag… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…More importantly, dating or social app users’ motives for using vary depending on different user groups and socio-cultural contexts. While De Seta and Zhang’s (2015) work on Momo used among Chinese urban population provides a snapshot of their interviewees using geolocating services for an escape from boredom, McDonald’s (2018) paper on social media uses in a rural Chinese town finds townspeople were able to acquire socialites with strangers online when they claimed all residents in the town are mutually familiar with each other.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…More importantly, dating or social app users’ motives for using vary depending on different user groups and socio-cultural contexts. While De Seta and Zhang’s (2015) work on Momo used among Chinese urban population provides a snapshot of their interviewees using geolocating services for an escape from boredom, McDonald’s (2018) paper on social media uses in a rural Chinese town finds townspeople were able to acquire socialites with strangers online when they claimed all residents in the town are mutually familiar with each other.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Familiarity underscores the cultural logics of Chinese society because it is the building block of social interactions between people (McDonald, 2018). Microcommerce activities have employed and amplified Weixin's affordances of different communicative practices that adhere to the notion of familiarity as described by our research participants.…”
Section: The Sociality Of Weixinmentioning
confidence: 86%
“…In this model, one could safely ignore strangers, because they had no status in the local social hierarchy (Erbaugh, 2008). Although China has undergone much urbanisation since economic reforms began in 1979, rural sociality still exerts a great deal of influence on how present-day Chinese socially interact with strangers (McDonald, 2018). Even now, when two strangers first converse, they will likely inquire whether they share a common town or province of origin, the same alma mater or some other commonality, so that they need not start their relationship as complete strangers.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%