Tuesday 14 August 2012

Week 5 Diasporas and The Media

Diasporic population devoted to maintaining their home country tradition and coming to terms with new cultural and social value, it’s also seek to engage with the affairs of their ‘home’ country (ALC 215, p.3-4). In this condition, the technologies and media are being a critical agent for them to continue to maintain a social contact with the ‘home’ community and to engage with the ‘home’ affairs.

Technologies and media took a vital role in daisporic culture. Cyberspace is a significant ‘place’ where allow diasporic communities to exchange information and maintain relationship by form a ‘virtual neighbourhood’ (ALC 215, p.3). The internet communications are seen to be the new possibilities of democratic and rational public debate which allowing all to become ‘equal’ to speak (Sun, p.132). Hence, whether you are Migrants who are restricted the freedom of speech in origin country or have been suffered an unfair treatment because of a demographic factors, you allow to become ‘equal’ in internet. Social media are now a one of powerful tool that allow migrants to received information, to express opinion or even the ‘hate speech’, and thus to participate in the political activities of origin country.


By today’s hot issue in HK, ‘withdrawing the national education’, we can see that how social media become a communication tool for Migrants to compatriots at home, and how diasporic communities desire to engage with the politics of their countries of origin. HKSS is a Deakin student club who launched a signature campaign with others 8 universities in Australia to support the campaign in hk. And there are different supporting campaigns are held in the world as well.

Australian overseas higher education student (Hong Kong) joint statement: Requesting the Hong Kong government withdraw the Moral and National Education Curriculum Facebook Page:






Reference
ALC 215 Study Guide, Topic 3, pp.3-4
Sun, W 2002, ‘Fantasizing the homeland: the internet, memory, and exilic longings’, Leaving China: media, migration, and transnational imagination 2002, Rowman & Littlefield, Lanham, pp. 113-136

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