The Technologization of News Acts in Networked News Participation: LGBT Self-Media in China

Authors

  • Yidong Wang University of Wisconsin-Madison
  • Valerie Belair-Gagnon University of Minnesota-Twin Cities
  • Avery E. Holton University of Utah

Keywords:

civic participation, LGBT activism, network technology, news acts, peripheral journalism

Abstract

The technologization of news acts refers to the applications of technologies in journalism and the functional and infrastructural roles technological actors, such as Web designers and coders, may play in these applications. This conceptual article explores how technology facilitates news acts as forms of civic participation, particularly through citizen-oriented journalistic practices. Recognizing emerging scholarship examining news participation, this article argues for situating journalism within the networked news ecology. Drawing on an example—self-media production by LGBT communities in Mainland China—we explore a framework (1) conceptualizing peripheral actors’ roles in journalism, (2) theorizing power dynamics driving the broader news ecology, and (3) accounting for political-economic and sociocultural contexts specific to localities. This article argues that the technologization of news acts presents a networked power structure within which peripheral actors are situated and of which they negotiate. Technological infrastructures are thus a pivot to connect contextual factors with networked news participation and reveal the dialectical power relations warranting an information elite in the news ecology.

Author Biographies

Yidong Wang, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Yidong Wang (corresponding author), Ph.D. studentUniversity of Wisconsin-MadisonSchool of Journalism and Mass Communication821 University Ave., Madison, WI 53706Email: wang797@wisc.eduORCID: 0000-0001-6552-6466Twitter: @StevenWangYD

Valerie Belair-Gagnon, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities

Valerie Belair-Gagnon, Assistant ProfessorUniversity of Minnesota-Twin CitiesHubbard School of Journalism and Mass Communication206 Church St. SE, #111, Minneapolis, MN, 55455Email: vbg@umn.eduORCID: 0000-0002-7756-1688Twitter: @journoscholar

Avery E. Holton, University of Utah

Avery E. Holton, Associate ProfessorUniversity of UtahDepartment of Communication255 Central Campus Dr., Salt Lake City, UT 84112Email: avery.holton@utah.eduORCID: 0000-0003-1307-2890Twitter: @averyholton

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Published

2020-09-13

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Section

Articles