Media, Mobilization and the
Umbrella Movement
The Umbrella Movement in Hong Kong caught the worlds attention and imagination at the end of 2014. The 79-day occupation campaign took on some of the characteristics of the recent wave of large-scale protest movements around the world, including the prominent roles played by the media both conventional and digital in the mobilization and communication processes of the movement.
This edited volume, Media, Mobilization and the Umbrella Movement, brings together nine contributions which examine various aspects of the media-movement nexus, including the power of televised images to mobilize people, the role of social media in the insurgent public sphere, young activists social media strategies, media influence on citizens understanding of civil disobedience, the governments response to digital media tactics, public discourses about the rule of law, and local and foreign media coverage of the movement. This high-quality collection will enhance understanding of the Umbrella Movement, and also facilitate and trigger more research and dialogue comparing the Umbrella Movement with other similar protest movements around the world.
This book was originally published as a special issue of the Chinese Journal of Communication.
Francis L. F. Lee is a Professor in the School of Journalism and Communication at The Chinese University of Hong Kong. He is lead author of Media, Social Mobilization, and Mass Protests in Post-colonial Hong Kong (2011) and author of Talk Radio, the Mainstream Press, and Public Opinion in Hong Kong (2014).
Media, Mobilization and the
Umbrella Movement
The Umbrella Movement in Hong Kong caught the worlds attention and imagination at the end of 2014. The 79-day occupation campaign took on some of the characteristics of the recent wave of large-scale protest movements around the world, including the prominent roles played by the media both conventional and digital in the mobilization and communication processes of the movement.
This edited volume, Media, Mobilization and the Umbrella Movement, brings together nine contributions which examine various aspects of the media-movement nexus, including the power of televised images to mobilize people, the role of social media in the insurgent public sphere, young activists social media strategies, media influence on citizens understanding of civil disobedience, the governments response to digital media tactics, public discourses about the rule of law, and local and foreign media coverage of the movement. This high-quality collection will enhance understanding of the Umbrella Movement, and also facilitate and trigger more research and dialogue comparing the Umbrella Movement with other similar protest movements around the world.
This book was originally published as a special issue of the Chinese Journal of Communication.
Francis L. F. Lee is a Professor in the School of Journalism and Communication at The Chinese University of Hong Kong. He is lead author of Media, Social Mobilization, and Mass Protests in Post-colonial Hong Kong (2011) and author of Talk Radio, the Mainstream Press, and Public Opinion in Hong Kong (2014).
First published 2017
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Contents
Citation Information
The chapters in this book were originally published in the Chinese Journal of Communication, volume 8, issue 4 (December 2015). When citing this material, please use the original page numbering for each article, as follows:
Introduction
Media Communication and the Umbrella Movement: introduction to the special issue
Francis L. F. Lee
Chinese Journal of Communication, volume 8, issue 4 (December 2015) pp. 333337
Chapter 1
Mobilization by images: TV screen and mediated instant grievances in the Umbrella Movement
Gary Tang
Chinese Journal of Communication, volume 8, issue 4 (December 2015) pp. 338355
Chapter 2
Social media and Umbrella Movement: insurgent public sphere in formation
Paul S. N. Lee, Clement Y. K. So and Louis Leung
Chinese Journal of Communication, volume 8, issue 4 (December 2015) pp. 356375
Chapter 3
Media and information praxis of young activists in the Umbrella Movement
Alice Y. L. Lee and Ka Wan Ting
Chinese Journal of Communication, volume 8, issue 4 (December 2015) pp. 376392
Chapter 4
Social movement as civic education: communication activities and understanding of civil disobedience in the Umbrella Movement
Francis L. F. Lee
Chinese Journal of Communication, volume 8, issue 4 (December 2015) pp. 393411
Chapter 5
A legal realist view on citizen actions in Hong Kongs umbrella movement
John Nguyet Erni
Chinese Journal of Communication, volume 8, issue 4 (December 2015) pp. 412419
Chapter 6
Contested news values and media performance during the Umbrella Movement
Chi Kit Chan
Chinese Journal of Communication, volume 8, issue 4 (December 2015) pp. 420428
Chapter 7
Business as usual: the UK national daily press and the Occupy Central movement
Colin Sparks
Chinese Journal of Communication, volume 8, issue 4 (December 2015) pp. 429446
Chapter 8
The coming colonization of Hong Kong cyberspace: government responses to the use of new technologies by the umbrella movement
Lokman Tsui
Chinese Journal of Communication, volume 8, issue 4 (December 2015) pp. 447455
Chapter 9
Yellow or blue ribbons: analysing discourses in conflict in the televized government-student meeting during the Occupy Movement in Hong Kong
Yiqi Liu
Chinese Journal of Communication, volume 8, issue 4 (December 2015) pp. 456467