Media narration, group behaviour, and nationalistic response to China’s photovoltaics on Bilibili

The escalating rivalry between the US and China in the photovoltaics industry has brought increased attention to Chinese nationalism towards the industry. This study examines how media narration and group behavior are associated with nationalist responses to China’s photovoltaics, using 4558 comment...

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Main Author: Zha, Yiru
Other Authors: School of Social Sciences
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2023
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/171316
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1713162023-10-19T00:57:50Z Media narration, group behaviour, and nationalistic response to China’s photovoltaics on Bilibili Zha, Yiru School of Social Sciences Social sciences::Communication Cyber Nationalism Media Narration The escalating rivalry between the US and China in the photovoltaics industry has brought increased attention to Chinese nationalism towards the industry. This study examines how media narration and group behavior are associated with nationalist responses to China’s photovoltaics, using 4558 comments and 11 video texts related to the geopolitical issues of China’s photovoltaics on the Bilibili platform. By applying ordinal logit, OLS, and ARMA regression analyses, this study finds that: (1) Nationalism in the comment zone tends to be positively associated with media’s narration of the West’s crackdown on China’s photovoltaics, blaming of Western countries and labeling of the West as a hegemonic force compared to China. (2) Nationalism in the comment zone tends to be negatively associated with the media’s narration of China’s photovoltaics’ strengths and achievements and its counterstrike against the West. (3) Media’s narration of China PV’s deficiencies and its capitalism-socialism narrative framework are insignificant to nationalism in the comment zone. (4) A cycle of conformity and anticonformity of nationalism emerges over time, demonstrating the strengthening of internal consistency and divergence among various internet groups. While complementing the existing literature, this study provides policy insights into controlling cyber nationalism by reducing blaming discourses, identity antithesis in narrations, and polarization of political sentiment. 2023-10-19T00:57:50Z 2023-10-19T00:57:50Z 2023 Journal Article Zha, Y. (2023). Media narration, group behaviour, and nationalistic response to China’s photovoltaics on Bilibili. East Asia. https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12140-023-09417-5 1096-6838 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/171316 10.1007/s12140-023-09417-5 2-s2.0-85169798708 en East Asia © 2023 The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature B.V. All rights reserved.
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social sciences::Communication
Cyber Nationalism
Media Narration
spellingShingle Social sciences::Communication
Cyber Nationalism
Media Narration
Zha, Yiru
Media narration, group behaviour, and nationalistic response to China’s photovoltaics on Bilibili
description The escalating rivalry between the US and China in the photovoltaics industry has brought increased attention to Chinese nationalism towards the industry. This study examines how media narration and group behavior are associated with nationalist responses to China’s photovoltaics, using 4558 comments and 11 video texts related to the geopolitical issues of China’s photovoltaics on the Bilibili platform. By applying ordinal logit, OLS, and ARMA regression analyses, this study finds that: (1) Nationalism in the comment zone tends to be positively associated with media’s narration of the West’s crackdown on China’s photovoltaics, blaming of Western countries and labeling of the West as a hegemonic force compared to China. (2) Nationalism in the comment zone tends to be negatively associated with the media’s narration of China’s photovoltaics’ strengths and achievements and its counterstrike against the West. (3) Media’s narration of China PV’s deficiencies and its capitalism-socialism narrative framework are insignificant to nationalism in the comment zone. (4) A cycle of conformity and anticonformity of nationalism emerges over time, demonstrating the strengthening of internal consistency and divergence among various internet groups. While complementing the existing literature, this study provides policy insights into controlling cyber nationalism by reducing blaming discourses, identity antithesis in narrations, and polarization of political sentiment.
author2 School of Social Sciences
author_facet School of Social Sciences
Zha, Yiru
format Article
author Zha, Yiru
author_sort Zha, Yiru
title Media narration, group behaviour, and nationalistic response to China’s photovoltaics on Bilibili
title_short Media narration, group behaviour, and nationalistic response to China’s photovoltaics on Bilibili
title_full Media narration, group behaviour, and nationalistic response to China’s photovoltaics on Bilibili
title_fullStr Media narration, group behaviour, and nationalistic response to China’s photovoltaics on Bilibili
title_full_unstemmed Media narration, group behaviour, and nationalistic response to China’s photovoltaics on Bilibili
title_sort media narration, group behaviour, and nationalistic response to china’s photovoltaics on bilibili
publishDate 2023
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/171316
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