{"id":1852,"date":"2014-02-03T13:00:08","date_gmt":"2014-02-03T12:00:08","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.politicseastasia.com\/staging\/3558\/?p=1852"},"modified":"2015-02-08T10:57:26","modified_gmt":"2015-02-08T09:57:26","slug":"digital-turn-in-asian-studies","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.politicseastasia.com\/staging\/3558\/research\/digital-nationalism\/digital-turn-in-asian-studies\/","title":{"rendered":"The Digital Turn in Asian Studies"},"content":{"rendered":"<h2>Review of the Asiascape: Digital Asia conference 2014<\/h2>\n<p>Like any interdisciplinary endeavour, studying digital communication in Asia can be challenging: not only does such work have to convince area specialists, it also has to connect with research across different disciplines, such as anthropology, economics, political science, media studies, or the computer sciences. About a year ago, several of my colleagues and I discussed how we could create a platform for those who are taking on that challenge. We decided that we needed a new academic journal, and that the work that we would showcase there should also be accompanied by events and discussions, both online and offline. As a result, we are launching the first issue of our new journal <a title=\"Asiascape: Digital Asia - submissions and information\" href=\"http:\/\/www.editorialmanager.com\/dias\/\" target=\"_blank\">Asiascape: Digital Asia<\/a> this March, and in the run-up to that launch we organized an international conference at Leiden University to discuss what it means to be part of <a title=\"The Challenge of Studying Digital Asia\" href=\"http:\/\/www.politicseastasia.com\/staging\/3558\/research\/digital-nationalism\/the-challenge-of-studying-digital-asia\/\">the digital turn in Asian studies<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p>From the 24th to 25th of January 2014, we asked participants to help us revisit the debates surrounding digital media and their potential to emancipate people. Throughout five panels and three sessions of lively plenary discussion, our contributors presented empirical evidence from societies in Asia and debated the theoretical and practical implications of how digital media are used in diverse settings, ranging from China to Korea, from India to Indonesia. Some of their articles\u00a0are available in <a title=\"Asiascape: Digital Asia special issue 1.1\" href=\"http:\/\/booksandjournals.brillonline.com\/content\/journals\/22142312\/1\/1-2\" target=\"_blank\">the\u00a0launch issue of our\u00a0journal<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p>Rather than going chronologically through our conference programme, which is <a title=\"DIAS Conference Programme\" href=\"http:\/\/www.politicseastasia.com\/staging\/3558\/research\/dias-conference-programme\/\">available online<\/a> along with the <a href=\"http:\/\/www.politicseastasia.com\/staging\/3558\/wp-content\/uploads\/2013\/12\/DIAS-Conference-2014-Book-of-Abstracts.pdf\">book of abstracts<\/a>, I want to take this opportunity to highlight what issues we came across in our discussions and suggest how our work on \u201cdigital Asia\u201d might fruitfully proceed. Before the conference, we asked our guests to send us answers to three short questions about digital media and Asia, and much of our discussion revolved around the responses to these questions: where might we find \u201cdigital Asia\u201d, how should we study our subject, and who might benefit from digital media\u2019s supposed \u201cemancipatory potentials\u201d. I\u2019ll go through each of these questions in turn. Throughout, I\u2019ll also include examples from the conference, links to various useful resources, as well as reference to related books and articles. If you have additional ideas or materials to share, feel free to leave a note in the comment section below.<\/p>\n<h3>Where is digital Asia?<\/h3>\n<p>[grid_6] [frame_left]<\/p>\n<h4>What our participants said:<\/h4>\n<p>&#8220;in life and society almost everywhere in Asia&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;Digital Asia is global, just as the many populations and individuals identifying as Asian can themselves now be found in locations across the globe&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;on a mixed terrain along a spectrum of infrastructures and user skill levels&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;Digital Asia is Asia in transformation \u2013 politically, socially, culturally, and also legally \u2013 by its digital media&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;it lies in a combination of the highly local, specific, and personal, and the broad and universal. Thus it can transcend traditional barriers of nation and state&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;Digital Asia is both online and offline, including both digital technologies\u2019 effects on Asia and Asia\u2019s effects on digital technologies&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;I would like to take &#8216;digital Asia&#8217; as Asia itself, for the digital technology is increasingly becoming an integrated part of everyday life in Asia&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>[\/frame_left] [\/grid_6]<\/p>\n<p>The first question we asked our participants was what the subject of our study really was. Does it make sense to talk about such a thing as \u201cdigital Asia\u201d, and if so: where should we look for it? This is not simply a question of where Asia might be on a map (though google apparently places \u201cdigital Asia\u201d alternatively in Singapore or in Chandigarh, India). What counts as \u201cAsia\u201d is a matter of complicated identity politics and knowledge construction, often closely linked to assumptions about the differences between \u201cEast\u201d and \u201cWest\u201d.<\/p>\n<p>Studying digital Asia therefore also means critically questioning to what extent our work might be caught in Orientalist fantasies of hyper-dynamic Asian techno utopias. As one of our participants rightly pointed out, we should also ask \u201cwhen is digital Asia\u201d \u2013 not only because it is our responsibility to rethink the <a title=\"Asian century comments\" href=\"http:\/\/www.international-economy.com\/TIE_Su13_AsiaCenturySymposium.pdf\" target=\"_blank\">commonplaces about the \u201cAsian century\u201d<\/a>\u00a0that have become popular with businesses, <a title=\"Asian Development Bank on the &quot;Asian Century&quot;\" href=\"http:\/\/www.adb.org\/publications\/asia-2050-realizing-asian-century\" target=\"_blank\">international organizations<\/a>, and <a title=\"Australian government white paper on the &quot;Asian Century&quot;\" href=\"http:\/\/www.asiaeducation.edu.au\/verve\/_resources\/australia-in-the-asian-century-white-paper.pdf\" target=\"_blank\">governments<\/a>, but also to check at what point in time we should roughly start looking for the \u201cdigital\u201d in different Asian contexts.<\/p>\n<p>We should remind ourselves that the ubiquity of digital media did not simply happen, but that it was created and promoted by policy-makers, entrepreneurs, programmers, journalists, and intellectuals, all engaged in the complex processes that are now commonly called \u201cglobalization\u201d (Held &amp; McGrew 2000). As Jonathan Benney pointed out in his talk on the design choices that went into creating the microblogging platform <a title=\"Weibo\" href=\"http:\/\/www.weibo.com\/?lang=en-us\" target=\"_blank\">Sina Weibo<\/a>, digital technologies are not necessarily value-neutral tools, but are often created by elites to serve certain purposes. In that sense, we&#8217;d be well advised to re-examine our own academic concepts, such the \u201cinformation age\u201d or the \u201cnetwork society\u201d (Castells 2009, 2010), and carefully consider how they are used in utopian digital discourses that primarily benefit the social strata that Hoofd (2008, 2012) has called \u201cspeed elites\u201d (see also Virilio 1977\/2006).<\/p>\n<p>But asking where digital Asia might be is also a practical question. Most of us are trained and employed to study a particular Asian country, so it may seem only prudent to use our expertise to study digital communication in, for instance, Japan, or Vietnam, or Malaysia. However, if digital technologies truly allow communication to transgress borders, then our studies will need to follow these information flows to look for \u201cdigital Asia\u201d outside of the geographical confines of specific Asian countries. How people around the world produce, exchange, or use digital media from Asia deserves our attention just as much as how digital media \u201ctravel\u201d transnationally within the Asian region and beyond.\u00a0In either case, it might be worth heading Ulrich Beck\u2019s (2005) warning to not fall into the trap of \u201cmethodological nationalism\u201d: a view that assumes processes play out at a national level simply because so much of the data we use is produced by nation-state governments.<\/p>\n<p>At the same time, there can be analytical reasons for studying digital media in a particular nation-state: language barriers, technological realities, and policy choices have each played their part in creating communication networks that are often far more national than they are cosmopolitan. One of the opportunities of the \u201clocative turn\u201d in media studies is to examine <em>where<\/em> the agents of digital communication really are, and to what extent \u201cdigital Asia\u201d overlaps with the geographical borders of a set of nation-states.<\/p>\n<h3>How should we study digital Asia?<\/h3>\n<p><a href=\"http:\/\/www.politicseastasia.com\/staging\/3558\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/01\/digital_methods400x400opt1.jpg\"><img decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignright size-full wp-image-1877\" src=\"http:\/\/www.politicseastasia.com\/staging\/3558\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/01\/digital_methods400x400opt1.jpg\" alt=\"Methods for the digital turn - keyword cloud from the DIAS Conference 2014.\" width=\"413\" height=\"413\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.politicseastasia.com\/staging\/3558\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/01\/digital_methods400x400opt1-150x150.jpg 150w, https:\/\/www.politicseastasia.com\/staging\/3558\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/01\/digital_methods400x400opt1-300x300.jpg 300w, https:\/\/www.politicseastasia.com\/staging\/3558\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/01\/digital_methods400x400opt1.jpg 413w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 413px) 100vw, 413px\" \/><\/a>Many of the concerns discussed above connect to other important questions: how should we analyse the object of our studies? What counts as data on \u201cdigital Asia\u201d? What methods should we use? Not too surprisingly, the methodological approaches of our participants varied as widely as their subjects. For scholars interested in digital media content, methods might include <a title=\"How to Do a Discourse Analysis\" href=\"http:\/\/www.politicseastasia.com\/staging\/3558\/studying\/how-to-do-a-discourse-analysis\/\">discourse analysis<\/a>, <a title=\"Introduction to Visual Communication Analysis\" href=\"http:\/\/www.politicseastasia.com\/staging\/3558\/studying\/an-introduction-to-visual-communication-analysis\/\">visual communication analysis<\/a>, iconography, and various tools adopted from the study of literature, art, and culture. This was eloquently demonstrated by Patrick Sharbough, who studies how memes are deployed in Vietnam to criticize contemporary politics, or by Carl Li and Mari Nakamura, whose research in the <a title=\"Beyond Utopia research project on Asiascape.org\" href=\"http:\/\/asiascape.org\/beyondutopia.html\" target=\"_blank\">Beyond Utopia project<\/a>\u00a0explores how manga or anime contribute to political thought in Japan.<\/p>\n<p>For those who are interested in how digital cultural industries work, a combination of content analysis and political economy tools may be most helpful, as was clear in Ross Tapsell\u2019s discussion of media freedom and converging media in Indonesia, in Dal Yong Jin\u2019s work on the international appeal of Korean technology and digital culture, or in Ku Shu-shiun\u2019s study of Taiwan\u2019s digital creative industries. Yet other studies focus on the use of digital technologies in people\u2019s everyday lives \u2013 a question that lends itself to participant observation, process tracing, and other ethnographic methods (Miller &amp; Slater 2000). That such approaches can be highly fruitful was apparent from Nimmi Rangaswamy and Payal Arora\u2019s insightful study of how teenage boys in Indian slums use cheap mobile phones and simple image editing software to woe potential romantic partners far above them in India\u2019s social hierarchies. And then there are political scientists and political communication scholars, whose methodologies range from quantitative studies of social media posts to interviews with government officials or the analysis of policy documents.<\/p>\n<p>What these and the other fascinating contributions to the <i>Asiascape: Digital Asia<\/i> conference demonstrate, is that distinctions between \u201coffline\u201d and \u201conline\u201d communication can be dangerously misleading: the cases our participants have been working on show that the digital is often an extension of the non-digital. While the massive popularity of digital media and communication can indeed be interpreted as a sea change in how our societies work today \u2013 for better (Shirky 2010) or worse (Morozov 2011) \u2013 the ways in which politics, society, and culture shape human communication processes (and are in turn shaped by them) are not always novel and revolutionary.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"http:\/\/www.politicseastasia.com\/staging\/3558\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/01\/rogers_300x400opt.jpg\"><img decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full wp-image-1868 alignleft\" src=\"http:\/\/www.politicseastasia.com\/staging\/3558\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/01\/rogers_300x400opt.jpg\" alt=\"Richard Rogers at the DIAS Conference 2014\" width=\"300\" height=\"400\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.politicseastasia.com\/staging\/3558\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/01\/rogers_300x400opt-225x300.jpg 225w, https:\/\/www.politicseastasia.com\/staging\/3558\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/01\/rogers_300x400opt.jpg 300w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px\" \/><\/a>Yet where these processes do have a novel dimension, the question remains how we should study that dimension. This was the subject of <a title=\"Richard Rogers at the University of Amsterdam\" href=\"http:\/\/www.uva.nl\/over-de-uva\/organisatie\/medewerkers\/content\/r\/o\/r.a.rogers\/r.a.rogers.html\" target=\"_blank\">Richard Rogers<\/a>\u2019 keynote speech on how we can deploy digital methods to study digital communication in its own right \u2013 a question that is becoming central to <a title=\"Why Digital Humanities?\" href=\"http:\/\/www.politicseastasia.com\/staging\/3558\/research\/digital-nationalism\/digital-humanities\/\">the digital turn in the arts, humanities, and social sciences<\/a> (see also Rogers 2013). Much of that digital turn has consisted of digitizing existing data or traditional research methods, for instance by creating digital archives and then conducting corpus analyses on the contents, or by gathering information through online surveys and questionnaires. As interesting as such \u201cvirtual methods\u201d are (Hine 2005), it can also be useful to follow the medium and study what its \u201cnatively digital\u201d elements tell us about our subject. Does linking behaviour between websites tell us anything about the politics of online association? How do Wikipedia entries in different languages construct different narratives on the same event? What can we learn about people\u2019s social, cultural, and political preferences based on their \u201cclicks\u201d and \u201clikes\u201d in social networks? Where exactly are the IP addresses of bloggers located in space?<\/p>\n<p>Rogers has created a number of <a title=\"Digital Methods Initiative\" href=\"https:\/\/wiki.digitalmethods.net\/Dmi\/VulnerabilityClimateChange\" target=\"_blank\">simple, intuitive digital tools<\/a> that make it possible to study such issues and ground the results online. It will be exciting to see how scholarship on digital Asia will make use of such tools to add the natively digital dimension to its research design. An important question along the way will likely be how we can assure that our digital research remains ethically sound &#8211; a topic that has come to the fore in the discussion about privacy in online data (Zimmer 2010).<\/p>\n<h3>Communicating digital communication<\/h3>\n<p>And then there is the question of how to most effectively present our studies to different audiences. If we are serious about participating in debates about \u201cemancipatory media\u201d and \u201cliberation technologies\u201d (Diamond 2010), it would be disingenuous to only do so through traditional academic outlets. Writing academic articles is of course a vital part of our work as scholars, and one that is reflected in the launch of our new academic journal. Yet even though writing is such a fundamental part of academic work, most of us are arguably not yet doing a good enough job at writing up our results and arguments in a way that others can understand and properly assess &#8211; Michael Billing has forcefully made this point in his recent book about the obscurity of academic writing (Billig 2013).<\/p>\n<p>In addition to improving our professional writing and presentation skills, we need to also ask ourselves how we can connect our concerns with those of journalists, bloggers, fans, policy-makers, visual artists, computer scientists, and anyone else who might be interested in digital Asia. How do we visualize our results? How do we engage in effective debate on our subjects? Martin Roth argued at the conference that it can be fruitful to try and communicate the results of a study in the medium of video games. Similarly, designing software art, creating an instructional youtube video, or running a twitter discussion promises to significantly expand our audience.<\/p>\n<p>What is more, such activities provide valuable insights into the pragmatic everyday idiosyncrasies of working with digital media. For example, it is one thing to acknowledge that search engines shape the way people construct and present information online; it is something else entirely if I experience that effect myself as I attempt to optimize this post for Google searches by\u00a0prominently placing the keyword \u201cdigital turn\u201d throughout the text (&#8230;I thank the SEO gods that I had that example on hand!).<\/p>\n<p>In that sense, studying digital communication also means practicing digital communication \u2013 a daunting task, considering the myriad of responsibilities academics already face today. Fortunately, it is a task that we don\u2019t face alone, but that lends itself to collaboration with other scholars in the humanities, social sciences, and across the computer sciences. Maybe even more fortunately: working with digital media is frankly a lot of fun.<\/p>\n<h3>Conclusion: who do digital media emancipate?<\/h3>\n<p>As much as the <i>Asiascape: Digital Asia<\/i> conference provided a useful forum to discuss research design and research method, our theme for the event was the debate surrounding digital media and their capacity to emancipate. As Chris Goto-Jones and I have tried to outline in the <a title=\"Introduction to DIAS launch issue\" href=\"http:\/\/www.politicseastasia.com\/staging\/3558\/wp-content\/uploads\/2013\/12\/Intro-DIAS_001_01-02_proof-02.pdf\" target=\"_blank\">introduction to our journal&#8217;s inaugural issue<\/a>, this has been a very heated debate, which has not always been particularly nuanced.<\/p>\n<p>The various examples that our participants have been working on provided an important reality check. They show that technology provides the potential for change, but that this potential plays out differently depending on the social, cultural, and political context. Digital media do not emancipate anyone automatically. They require the actions of people to unfold their potentials.<\/p>\n<p>Another point that our participants stressed, is that the word <i>emancipation<\/i> may be misleading. It might be better to ask who is <i>empowered<\/i> by digital media, and what exactly digital media empower users to do. If the main beneficiaries of the digital turn are those who are already highly educated and economically well-off, as some of the research indeed suggests, then the changes that such media facilitate may mainly be power shifts between different privileged elites \u2013 not exactly what we would call emancipation.<\/p>\n<p>What is more, while digital technologies do indeed seem to increase the ease, the scope, and the speed with which their users communicate (Benkler 2006), they do so regardless of what the users\u2019 messages or political affiliations are: a blog, a social networking page, or a mobile phone can be deployed to promote diversity and support the disenfranchised, but can also be deployed to spread hate or oppress others. If our research mainly focuses on positive social change, it risks biasing us towards the actions of those we want to see as noble underdogs, and blinding us to the many cases that demonstrate the darker sides of the empowerment story.<\/p>\n<p>Nevertheless, there are a number of reasons to be cautiously optimistic about the way that digital technologies shape societies, in Asia or elsewhere. As many of the examples from this conference show, digital media and digital devices have indeed had a profound impact on how people engage with each other and exchange information (see also Gilmor 2013 and Zuckerman 2013). Whether it is Indian boys trying to meet girls through Facebook, Taiwanese activists working towards positive policy changes by organizing huge public demonstrations, or Vietnamese social media users who creatively rework cultural products to criticize government censorship and propaganda, the dynamics we witness in digital Asia would not be possible without the various technologies our participants are analysing. The challenge will now be to build convincing theories from this fascinating empirical work, and to do so in a nuanced way that does justice to the complexity of the issue.<\/p>\n<h3>References:<\/h3>\n<p>Beck, Ulrich (2005),\u00a0<i>Power in the Global Age<\/i>. Cambridge &amp; Malden, MA: Polity Press.<\/p>\n<p>Benkler, Yochai (2006),\u00a0<i>The Wealth of Networks \u2013 How Social Production Transforms Markets and Freedom<\/i>. New Haven &amp; London: Yale University Press.<\/p>\n<p>Bennett, Lance, &amp; Segerberg, Alexandra (2012), \u2018The Logic of Connective Action \u2013 Digital Media and the Personalization of Contentious Politics\u2019. <i>Information, Communication &amp; Society<\/i>, 15(5), 739-768.<\/p>\n<p>Billig, Michael (2013), <em>Learn to Write Badly &#8211; How to Succeed in the Social Sciences<\/em>. Cambridge et al.: Cambridge University Press.<\/p>\n<p>Castells, Manuel (2009),\u00a0<i>Communication Power<\/i>. Oxford: Oxford University Press.<\/p>\n<p>Castells, Manuel (2010),\u00a0<i>The Rise of the Network Society: Vol.1. The Information Age<\/i>\u00a0(2nd\u00a0ed.). Oxford et al.: Wiley-Blackwell.<\/p>\n<p>Diamond, Larry (2010), &#8216;Liberation Technology&#8217;. <em>Journal of Democracy<\/em>, 21(3), 69-83.<\/p>\n<p>Gilmor, Dan (2013), <a title=\"Gilmore Mediactive pdf\" href=\"http:\/\/mediactive.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2010\/12\/mediactive_gillmor.pdf\" target=\"_blank\"><i>Mediactive<\/i><\/a>. Creative Commons.<\/p>\n<p>Held, David, &amp; McGrew, Anthony (2000), \u2018<a title=\"Held &amp; McGrew Globalization Debate pdf\" href=\"http:\/\/soc303.files.wordpress.com\/2011\/12\/soc303_globalizationdebate.pdf\" target=\"_blank\">The Great Globalization Debate: An Introduction<\/a>\u2019. In: Held, David, &amp; McGrew, Anthony (Eds.),\u00a0<i>The Global Transformation Reader<\/i>\u00a0(2nd\u00a0ed.). Cambridge &amp; Malden, MA: Polity Press (pp.1-50).<\/p>\n<p>Hine, Christine (Ed.) (2005), <em>Virtual Methods &#8211; Issues in Social Research on the Internet<\/em>. Oxford &amp; New York: Berg.<\/p>\n<p>Hoofd, Ingrid Maria (2008), \u2018<a title=\"Hoofd on Complicit Subversion, First Monday\" href=\"http:\/\/firstmonday.org\/article\/view\/2147\/2032\" target=\"_blank\">Complicit Subversion: Cultural New Media Activism and \u201cHigh\u201d Theory<\/a>\u2019. <i>First Monday<\/i> 13(10).<\/p>\n<p>Hoofd, Ingrid Maria (2012),\u00a0<i>Ambiguity of Activism: Alter Globalism and the Imperatives of Speed<\/i>. New York &amp; London: Routledge.<\/p>\n<p>Jenkins, Henry (2006),\u00a0<i>Convergence Culture \u2013 Where Old and New Media Collide<\/i>. New York &amp; London: New York University Press.<\/p>\n<p>Manovich, Lev (2013),\u00a0<a title=\"Manovich Software Takes Command pdf\" href=\"http:\/\/issuu.com\/bloomsburypublishing\/docs\/9781623566722_web\" target=\"_blank\"><i>Software Takes Command<\/i><\/a>. New York et al.: Bloomsbury.<\/p>\n<p>Miller, Daniel, &amp; Slater, Don (2000), <em>The Internet &#8211; An Ethnographic Approach<\/em>. Oxford &amp; New York: Berg.<\/p>\n<p>Morozov, Evgeny (2011),\u00a0<i>The Net Delusion: The Dark Side of Internet Freedom<\/i>. New York et al.: Penguin Press.<\/p>\n<p>Rogers, Richard (2013),\u00a0<em>Digital Methods<\/em>. Cambridge, MA &amp; London: MIT Press.<\/p>\n<p>Schneider, Florian, &amp; Goto-Jones, Chris (2014), \u2018<a title=\"Schneider &amp; Goto-Jones DIAS Introduction 2014 pdf\" href=\"http:\/\/www.politicseastasia.com\/staging\/3558\/wp-content\/uploads\/2013\/12\/Intro-DIAS_001_01-02_proof-02.pdf\" target=\"_blank\">Revisiting the Emancipatory Potential of Digital Media in Asia \u2013 Introduction to the Inaugural Issue of Asiascape Digital Asia<\/a>\u2019. <i>Asiascape: Digital Asia<\/i>, 1(1-2), 3-13.<\/p>\n<p>Shirky, Clay (2010), <em>Cognitive Surplus: How Technology Makes Consumers into Collaborators<\/em>. New York et al.: Penguin Press.<\/p>\n<p>Virilio, Paul (1977\/2006),\u00a0<i>Speed and Politics<\/i>. Los Angeles: Semiotext(e).<\/p>\n<p>Zimmer, Michael (2010), \u2018<a title=\"Zimmer But the Data is Already Public pdf\" href=\"http:\/\/www.sfu.ca\/~palys\/Zimmer-2010-EthicsOfResearchFromFacebook.pdf\" target=\"_blank\">\u201cBut the Data is Already Public\u201d: on the Ethics of Research in Facebook<\/a>\u2019. <i>Ethics and Information Technology<\/i>, 12, 313-325.<\/p>\n<p>Zuckerman, Ethan (2013), <em>Digital Cosmopolitans in the Age of Connection<\/em>. New York &amp; London: Norton.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>On 24 &#038; 25 January, we invited leading scholars to join us at Leiden University to revisit the emancipatory potential of digital media in Asia and discuss the digital turn in Asian studies. Read more about the discussions and ideas that accompanied this Asiascape: Digital Asia event.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":1854,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"image","meta":{"nf_dc_page":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[41,45],"tags":[85,84,62,86,65,109,63,87],"class_list":["post-1852","post","type-post","status-publish","format-image","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-digital-nationalism","category-research","tag-asia","tag-conference","tag-digital-media","tag-emancipation","tag-ict","tag-internet","tag-networks","tag-technology","post_format-post-format-image"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.4 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>The Digital Turn in Asian Studies - Politics East Asia<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"Read about our Asiascape: Digital Asia conference on digital media&#039;s emancipatory potentials and follow our discussion of the digital turn in Asian studies.\" \/>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.politicseastasia.com\/staging\/3558\/research\/digital-nationalism\/digital-turn-in-asian-studies\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"The Digital Turn in Asian Studies - 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