Challenging Official Propaganda? Public Opinion Leaders on Sina Weibo

被引:67
|
作者
Nip, Joyce Y. M. [1 ,2 ]
Fu, King-wa [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Sydney, Dept Media & Commun, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia
[2] Univ Sydney, Dept Chinese Studies, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia
[3] Univ Hong Kong, Journalism & Media Studies Ctr, Hong Kong, Hong Kong, Peoples R China
来源
CHINA QUARTERLY | 2016年 / 225卷
关键词
China; internet; propaganda; public opinion; social media; Weibo; MICROBLOGS; AGENDA; CHINA;
D O I
10.1017/S0305741015001654
中图分类号
K9 [地理];
学科分类号
0705 ;
摘要
This article examines the prominence of various user categories as opinion leaders, defined as initiators, agenda setters or disseminators, in 29 corruption cases exposed on Sina Weibo. It finds that ordinary citizens made up the largest category of initiators but that their power of opinion leadership was limited as they had to rely on media organizations to spread news about the cases. News organizations and online media were the main opinion leaders. Government and Party bodies initiated a fair number of cases and, despite not being strong agenda setters or disseminators, were able to dominate public opinion owing to the fact that news organizations and online media mainly published official announcements about the cases. Media organizations also played a secondary role as the voice of the people. While individuals from some other user categories were able to become prominent opinion leaders, news workers are likely to be the most promising user category to challenge official propaganda. ?? ??????????????????????????, ????????????????(??????????????????)????????????????????, ???????????, ???????????????????????????????????????????????????????????, ???????????, ????????????????????, ????????????????????????????????, ??????????????????????????, ????????????
引用
收藏
页码:122 / 144
页数:23
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Research on Recognition of Opinion Leaders in Sina Weibo Platform
    Lian, Xinchun
    Zhang, Junqiao
    Chen, Xuebo
    [J]. 2020 CHINESE AUTOMATION CONGRESS (CAC 2020), 2020, : 2544 - 2548
  • [2] Public Opinion Spamming: A Model for Content and Users on Sina Weibo
    Guo, Ziyu
    Wang, Liqiang
    Wang, Yafang
    Zeng, Guohua
    Liu, Shijun
    de Melo, Gerard
    [J]. WEBSCI'18: PROCEEDINGS OF THE 10TH ACM CONFERENCE ON WEB SCIENCE, 2018, : 210 - 214
  • [3] Research on Weibo Opinion Leaders Identification and Analysis in Medical Public Opinion Incidents
    Wu, Jiang
    Zhao, Yinghui
    Gao, Jiahui
    [J]. Data Analysis and Knowledge Discovery, 2019, 3 (04): : 53 - 62
  • [4] Public Opinion Analysis for the Covid-19 Pandemic Based on Sina Weibo Data
    Wang, Feng
    Gong, Yunpeng
    [J]. ADVANCES IN NATURAL COMPUTATION, FUZZY SYSTEMS AND KNOWLEDGE DISCOVERY, ICNC-FSKD 2022, 2023, 153 : 993 - 1001
  • [5] Public opinion information dissemination in mobile social networks - taking Sina Weibo as an example
    Wang, Xiwei
    Xing, Yunfei
    Wei, Yanan
    Zheng, QingXiao
    Xing, Guochun
    [J]. INFORMATION DISCOVERY AND DELIVERY, 2020, 48 (04) : 213 - 224
  • [6] An Exploration on Analysis of Local Public Opinion based on Sina Weibo associated with Regional Web Community
    Cui, Binyue
    Zhou, Wei
    He, Zhiqiang
    Yokoi, Shigeki
    [J]. 2014 PROCEEDINGS OF THE 9TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON COMPUTER SCIENCE & EDUCATION (ICCSE 2014), 2014, : 477 - 480
  • [7] Reason and passion in public discussion on Sina Weibo
    Liu, Xinchuan
    Xu, Weiai
    Li, Boliang
    [J]. TELEMATICS AND INFORMATICS, 2019, 45
  • [8] Understanding the power of opinion leaders' influence on the diffusion process of popular mobile games: Travel Frog on Sina Weibo
    Wang, Zongshui
    Liu, Haiyan
    Liu, Wei
    Wang, Shouyang
    [J]. COMPUTERS IN HUMAN BEHAVIOR, 2020, 109
  • [9] PUBLIC OPINION AND PROPAGANDA
    Nixon, Raymond B.
    [J]. JOURNALISM QUARTERLY, 1948, 25 (04): : 419 - 421
  • [10] PUBLIC OPINION AND PROPAGANDA
    Lee, Alfred McClung
    [J]. SOCIAL FORCES, 1950, 29 (02) : 211 - 212