Title: International Conference on Mobile Communication and Asian Modernities
1 International Conference on Mobile
Communication and Asian Modernities
- 20-21 October 2005Peking University, China
2- Mobile Cultures of Migrant Workers
- in Southern China
- Literacies, Consumption, Leisure and Gender
Relations of the New Working Classes - Angel Lin, The Chinese University of Hong Kong
- Avin Tong, City University of Hong Kong
3Introduction
- Rural-to-urban migration in China since mid-1980s
- A promise of a taste of middle-class lifestyle
- A fantasy for migrant workers.
- A newfound freedom for the rising middle class.
- Two tracks of social mobility reinforcing each
other. - Young urban professionals actualizing the early
dream of modernity. - Grassroots workers fancying the success stories
of the middle class. - A double helix of development.
- A seemingly realizable dream for one.
- A near illusion for another. (Ma and Tse, 20058)
4Individuating project
- An individuating project driven by the desire for
an urban middle-class life - Pun (2005) studies a group of women workers in
China and finds that they are proud of their
earning capacities, work skills and new-found
urban identities ? a promise of freedom and
material comfort - Pun (2005 9) describes the process of entering
the factory at the beginning as actually a
process of individuating the self, which
makes someone realize that it had recourse to
nobody but itself
5Factory worker as a machine
- Haraszti (1978) even uses the term machine
to describe a factory worker, as he puts it - In the end, the only way out (of the factory) is
to become a machine myself. The best workers are
very good at this. It is as if an immovable mask
was glued to their faces, whatever the type of
work they are doing. (1978 54) - All these harsh disciplinary conditions of the
factory drive them to seek pleasure outside the
workplace, mainly in different forms of
consumption practices
6The New work and spend culture
- Global Consumerism driven by the desire to
consume - Stripping off the rural skin, purchasing a
cosmopolitan mask, and in the process becoming
naked ness of modern bodies - A new kind of work-and-spend culture is
formed, in which all workers work hard, play
hard to balance the boredom of alienating work
with a pleasurable consumption life - The working-class migrant workers desire a
middle-class lifestyle, and they try to purchase
a modern and cosmopolitan life style through
their consumption practices ? entrapping the
workers instead of empowering them?
7Naked bodies
- Process of becoming naked bodies
- In the metaphor of Ma and Cheng (forthcoming),
the migrant worker is in the process of
de-clothing their rural body and re-making itself
into an urban body - They are thus rendered naked in their
transition condition of trying to reach for urban
modernity - They have been caught between two discourses and
embraced by neither ? traditional rural
discourse vs modern urban discourse
8Widespread use of mobile phones
- According to statistics released by the Ministry
of Information Industry, by 2000 there were only
85 million mobile phone users in Mainland China - By mid 2004, the number of mobile phone
subscribers had reached 305 million - The national average penetration rate was 24
percent, with Guangdong province having an
above-national average penetration rate of around
60 percent
9Popularity of mobile phones
- Migrant workers are among the lowest-income
groups in Guangdong, taking up largely skilled
and semi-skilled jobs in factories with monthly
salaries ranging from 400 to 800 Yuans (US1 is
approximately 8.23 Yuans) - However, a migrant worker is willing to spend
double or triple her/his monthly salary to
purchase a mobile phone - They usually purchase new models, and mostly the
well known imported brands such as Nokia,
Motorola, and Samsung - The price of the kind of mobile phones they
bought averaged between 1,500 and 2000 Yuans, and
even over 2000 Yuans -
(Law and Peng, 2004)
10Icons of urban identities
- Many migrant workers prefer spending more money
on mobile phones, instead of contributing to
their families - This seems to show that mobile phone has become a
symbol of social identity, which constitute
symbols of the keenly desired urban and
cosmopolitan lifestyle - This also enables them to engage in different
types of social relations, and to have a sense of
belonging to the communities - The mobile phones make them easier to cope with
the harsh and tedious working environment in
which they find themselves
11The present study
- Research objectives
- To understand the lifestyle aspirations and life
trajectories of the new young working classes in
China who are experiencing the most rapid
socioeconomic changes in society - How they are negotiating their ways of being
amidst much tension between old and new
sociocultural values governing consumption,
leisure, life aspirations, gender and familial
relations - Their problems and dilemmas will be discussed,
and suggestions will be proposed for improving
their situation
12The present study
- Research design
- The present study examines mobile cultures among
migrant workers in the industrialized villages of
Tangxia and Humen Towns of Dongguan in the
Guangdong Province - 20 migrant workers, 8 females and twelve males
were interviewed between July 2004 and March 2005 - They were young villagers from less-developed or
poor provinces such as Hunan , Sichuan and
Guangxi - In-depth individual and group interviews with the
migrant workers were conducted to analyze their
mobile consumption practices, as well as to
understand their work life, leisure life and
dilemmas/conflicts that they might experience in
their everyday social relations
13Findings
- The creative SMS literacies of migrant workers
Mobilizing limited linguistic resources to craft
out arty messages - Use of mobile phones and the consumption
practices of migrant workers - Maintaining familial and social relations with
mobile phone calls and text-messaging - Seeking and constructing virtual romance through
the new technology
14Limited literacy level
- All migrant workers interviewed prefer writing
SMS messages in Chinese. Most of them use the
Chinese keystroke text input method, and a few
of them use the Chinese phonetic input system
and Chinese handwriting input method - One of the high frequent users, Miss Fung,
insists on writing SMS in Chinese. She points
out, English (message) is not funny at all!
(??????????? - It is believed that their English level is
relatively low, and they may find it difficult to
compose a message in English. It will be much
easier for them to express themselves in Chinese,
which is their first language
15Creative SMS literacies
- Despite their relatively low literacy level, most
of our informants claim that they wont rely on
SMS manuals and prefer creating messages on their
own - Miss Fung, criticizes those typical examples in
SMS manuals as not interesting (???) - One of the male workers Mr. Yu says,
- Those (SMS) written on the manuals bought are
already outdated. Those messages that come out
from ones mind are the bestthink and create a
message, its a kind of training. - (????????????????????????????????,???????)
16Creative SMS literacies
- Some informants even have the experience of
receiving poems from their friends, which show
their creativity and originality, and also a high
Chinese literacy level - Factory work does not involve literacy work, and
they have no literacy practices in the workplace.
SMS thus provides them with a medium for
practicing their everyday literacies - Through creating and re-creating different types
of SMS messages, it is possible for them to
acquire literacy skills informally
17Popularity of mobile phones
- In China, Guangdong has the highest number of
mobile phone users - With the rapidly soaring penetration rate, mobile
phone is becoming an essential part of workers
life - Mr. Cheung describes it as a common phenomenon,
- Nowadays almost everyone has a mobile phone.
Even they need to eat pickles and pickled cabbage
resembling sauerkraut for a month, he (they) will
still buy a mobile phone. - ??????????????,??????????????,???????????
18Mobile phones as fashion
- They like following the trends and buying the new
models, using up a large sum of money (which is
often several times of their monthly salary) - It seems that both male and female migrant
workers consider mobile phones to be a kind of
fashion, an icon of cultural taste, and a symbol
of modern lifestyle - Some informants point out that men also keep an
eye on the trends of mobile phones. - Those boys in my circle change their mobile
phones quickly, (what they bought are) the latest
ones, and also the most expensive ones. - ?????????,????????????????,???????
19Mobile phones as symbols of identity
- A factory owner called Miss Sung believes that
workers regard mobile phones as symbols of
identity - When they just come to work, after getting the
salary for the first month, they will buy a
mobile phone immediately. Actually they do not
need (it). A mobile phone is used for keeping
contact (with others) conveniently, right? But
they just always carry their mobile phones it
seems that having a mobile phone is equal to
having an (important) identity. - ??????,????????????,??????????????????????,???????
?????????,???????????!?
20High expenditure on mobile phones
- The migrant workers actually find it hard to
afford the relatively high expenditure on mobile
phones - On average the workers earn around 700-900 Yuans
per month, and some earn a bit more (say like
1000-1200 Yuans)
21High expenditure on mobile phones
- A female worker Miss Fung admits that her mobile
phone nearly used up all her salary. - I am making around 500 Yuans each month for my
work, I bought that (old) mobile phone with
around 1400 Yuans. I work out there, sometimes
when I get the salary, I dont even have a penny
in my pocketafter buying the mobile phone, I
have no single penny left on my body! - ???????????,?????????????,??????,?????????????????
???????????????????!?
22Pleasurable consumption
- In addition to buying and keeping a mobile phone,
other consumption practices like buying clothes
and accessories, playing and eating around also
seem to help the migrant workers to balance off
the pain of boring work - Most of these workers, particularly young girls,
spend a large sum of money on shopping and
entertainment, with very high consumption rates
as compared to their earning capacities - A factory owner, Miss Sung, makes the comment
that most young working girls in her workplace
spend all their income without saving a single
penny
23Womens consumption practices
- A female factory manager Miss Leung says,
- Workers in our factory have a relatively high
consumption level, they are wasteful and
extravagant in their consumption. Girls are
always buying clothes that cost a hundred or two
hundred Yuansone piece of clothes, one skirt,
one little vest nevertheless, (they are) quite
pretty when wearing them, more trendy than
before. - ????????????????,???????,????????????????????????
?????,??????????,?????????????
24Womens consumption practices
- One of the illustrative examples is Miss Fung,
who is a crazy fan of fashionable clothes - (What I spend most is on) buying clothes, I have
many clothes, but I find them not enough when I
need to wear themI almost need to buy clothes
every month, when I go shopping, I have to buy
clothes. - ?(?????????)???,?????,?????????????????????,?????
????,???????
25Little family burden
- Many young migrant workers do not need to support
their families, or at least their families do not
expect them to contribute much financially - As Miss Sung points out,
- All of them wear rings, earrings, all things
(accessories) like that, and also necklaces.
Everyone is like that. Changing all the
timemaybe all that (they have) earned is all
used in this way, and their families do not
really need their money. - ?????????????????,??????????????????????????????,
????????????????
26Little family burden
- Miss Fung admits that she does not have to send
money to her parents - My family wont take my money, (they) just say
you are no longer young, need to keep some money
as dowrymy mother wont accept a single penny
from me. And I spend crazily outside. - ?????????,?????????,????????????????????,????????
??
27Changing image of migrant workers
- In the past, working hard and saving hard were
the dominant images of rural people - Those who moved to urban cities for work need to
earn a lot for supporting their families, living
a rather harsh and uncomfortable life - The workers interviewed do work hard for making
more money, but they also spend hard and play
hard, particularly in the case of young women
workers - This enables them to have a taste of being
middle-class (or at least being close to feeling
it), in the case of female workers, to escape
from the patriarchal familial relations in the
rural village -
28Limited social circles
- It is not easy for migrant workers to develop new
social relations, due to the highly mobile nature
of factory work - Most of them do not stay in one factory for a
long period of time, and they move freely when
they find another factory offering higher incomes
and better welfare (Law and Peng, 2005) - According to the ethnographic observation of Pun
(2005), different local or ethnic groups in the
workplace seldom make friends across their group
boundaries
29Transcient friendship
- Miss Fung finds that many newly developed
relationships are temporal and frugal - I have told you before that I dont have many
friends. Whenever I go, there are large groups of
people playing with me, but (we) just forget
(each other) afterwards, and wont keep in touch
with one another. Its transientSometimes I find
myself very lonely, cant even find someone to
talk to. - ???????????,?????,??????????,????????,??????????,?
????????????????,???????????
30Self-enclosed state
- Miss Sung has made a similar remark
- You imagine someone working at the factory,
(always) moving from one site to another. How can
(we) find an intimate friendmaybe we just work
in this factory for one or two months, and so we
cannot develop a deep relationshipafter a long
time, it will form a self-enclosed state in ones
heart. - ??????,????,????,???????????????????????,???????
??????????????????????????
31Maintenance of social relations
- Law and Peng (2005) suggest that without mobile
phones to make the physically absent present,
friendships cannot be prolonged - Therefore, mobile phones help maintain existing
social relationships in expanded spatio-temporal
contexts (Pertierra et al, 2002) - As Gergen (2003) maintains, the mobile phone
serves the function of pulling people who are
physically far away into immediate cyber presence - Many of our informants also use mobile phones to
arrange social gatherings and to send greetings
to friends during festivals
32Contact with old friends
- Most of the workers find mobile phones useful in
maintaining close relations with their old
friends in the hometown - Mr. Ho, considers the mobile phone as an
important means of maintaining friendship - Particularly between friends, some friends do
not contact (one another) for a few days, maybe
they have gone back to the hometown, having a
mobile phone enables us to keep in touch (with
them). - ????????,??????????,????????,??????????
33Contact with new friends
- Miss Au says that she uses mobile phones to
contact both new friends in the city and old
friends in the village. - I am the kind of people that wont set any fixed
criteria for making friends once (I) find them
chummy then (we) can be friends, not necessarily
from the same village. - ????????????,??????????????,????????
- It shows that mobile phones are personal devices
sustaining relationships and commitment, tools of
building small social worlds with new and old
social relations
34Importance of familial relations
- For those migrant workers floating far away
from their home villages, mobile phones enhance
their ties with family members back in their home
villages - A young female worker Miss Fung says that mobile
phone enables her to share the ups and downs with
her mother, who is the closest person in her
life, at any time and any place. - I need to call (home) once to twice each week,
and (I) must call during festival days.
Particularly when I miss my family sometimes, and
feel uncomfortable in heart, then (I will) call
my mother and share my grievances - ???????????,????????,????????,??????,???????????
35Use of SMS
- In addition to voice calls, sending SMS (Short
Messaging Services) messages is essential in
developing and maintaining ones connections with
friends/family members - In our study, some workers prefer using SMS to
contact their friends/family members - Miss Wu, a female worker, considers sending SMS
to be a very important leisure activity among her
friends - I will send (SMS) to others. We almost find a
time every day (to send SMS). (We) must play it
for a while when (we) have a little
timeotherwise life will be very boring. - ????????,?????????????,????????????????????
36Use of SMS
- Another female worker, Miss Ho, has a practice of
sending SMS to her mother in the village - My mother knows how to send SMS, but only
confined to those default ones installed (in the
mobile phone) What are you doing now? Have you
eaten yet? - ???????,??????????????????????
- In our study, both phone calls and SMS are major
ways for migrant workers to maintain close
relationships with old friends and family
members, sharing with them their ups and downs
37Popularity of SMS
- According to statistics, 18.9 billion messages
were sent in 2001 in Guangdong in 2002, the
number of messages increased strikingly to 90
billion, averaging 247 million a day -
- SMS is regarded as an ideal tool for making
social arrangements, storing appointments and
addresses they can also reach their friends
within a minute and responses are often very fast
(Haig, 2002)
38Popularity of SMS
- In our study, most informants both like and
practice text-messaging - They usually send messages for fun, to chat with
friends and family members, to exchange sweet
words with lovers, and some to exchange
information, and some to fix a date and place to
meet each other - On average the workers send no more than 300 SMS
(quota for most mobile service packages) per
month, and most of them send/receive around
100-200 messages each month
39Heavy users of SMS
- A female worker, Miss Fung, has a record of
sending 160 messages within one day, and a few
workers send out/receive around 80 messages each
week - Miss Fung also breaks another record of chatting
with a few targets at the same time. - I can chat with seven to eight people at the
same time. I used a Nokia mobile phone before to
play SMS, during the peak time I sent out 160 SMS
a dayit is because I am not just talking to one
personI chat with so many people, if you dont
talk to me, I can talk to another. - ??????????????,???????????????,?????????160??????
?????????????????,???,?????????
40Low noise level
- In our study, many workers like to send SMS
during working hours, which is described as
rather low profile as compared to talking on
phone - One of the factory owners Miss Sung says
- (They) cant make phone calls during work hours,
but they can bring (the mobile phone with them).
If they send those things like SMS and no one
discovers it, then its okay. If (someone)
discovers it, money will be deducted (from their
salary). - ???????????,?????????????????,???????,?????????
41Economical
- Another advantage of using SMS is that it is
relatively economical - As compared to other communicative means such as
direct phone calls (particularly IDD), sending
messages is a less expensive way of maintaining
connections in the cyberspace - Most of our informants subscribe to a package
that includes SMS, which costs them no more than
100 Yuans each month for using this function
42Gendered communicative practices
- Men and women seem to express themselves
differently, as revealed in their practices of
using mobile phones/SMS - According to Law and Peng (2003, 2005), many male
workers claim that they would prefer making voice
calls to sending messages, while female workers
enjoy sending messages - This point is made by our female informant, Miss
Fung, as her boyfriend seems to have no interest
in sending SMS, and he always replies to her
message with only a few words
43Gendered communicative practices
- Miss Fung recalls some unhappy experiences
- Whenever he sends me messages, they are centered
around me, ask me whats happening here. If I
send him messages, ask him what he is doing, he
will reply I am busy...every time he says he
is busy after chatting for a few sentences. Every
time its he who uses busy as a reason for
closing the conversation. - ??????????????,?????????????????,??????,??????
??????????????,????????????????????
44Gendered communicative practices
- Miss Fung also criticizes her boyfriend as not
romantic in writing messages - She prefers more expressive writing styles
instead of instrumental and practical ones - He never seriously sends me three words saying
I miss you, he never sends it. He uses other
ways to ask me out. I know he misses me, wants me
to go out with him , but he never sends (me)
those three words. Every time I talk to him on
phone I ask him do you miss me?, he says
miss, and I asks why dont you tell me then?,
then he says you know that, its okay. - ??????????????????????,???,???????????,???????,?
???,?????????,???????????????????,???,?????
????????????????????
45Gendered communicative practices
- However, some male informants are actually
willing and eager to use, and even very
interested in using, this new means of
communication - Mr. Ho, admits that SMS has become an important
part of his leisure life, and he will feel
depressed if no one sends him SMS - If I havent received any message for a few
days, I will feel a bit unhappy in my heart. (I)
will have a feeling of being isolated. - ??????????????,????????,?????????
46Gendered communicative practices
- Another male informant Mr. Au says,
- If I havent received SMS for two or three
days, I will think how come I dont receive any
SMS? (My) friends dont send (SMS) to me, then
why doesnt the SMS center send me some? - ?????????????,??????????????????,???????????????
- A female worker, Miss Lau, points out that some
male workers are heavy users of SMS. - I know one boy who is fond of sending SMS, each
time (the message) he sent me contains two
hundred to three hundred words. - ????????????????,?????????????????
47Effort in composing SMS
- Some of them will make efforts in creating
messages, and sometimes getting inspiration from
their friends messages and also SMS manuals
(Lin, 2005) - They find it more meaningful to learn from the
classic examples and then create their original
messages. Mr. Yu says, - Those (SMS) written on the manuals bought are
already outdated. Those that come out from ones
mind are the bestthink about one, its a kind of
training. - ????????????????????????????????,???????)
48Dating through SMS
- In some cases, male workers make use of SMS in
settling arguments with girlfriends, and some of
them like Mr. Kok will use SMS for dating and
courtship in the initial stage, as they can
express their feelings more freely (and of course
to avoid embarrassment) in a textual world than
in a face-to-face context - This attitude seems to deviate from the
stereotypical image of men, who are often thought
to be relatively instrumental and lacking in
creativity in expressing themselves
49Virtual romance
- There is a popular network called Mobile Fantasy
Network (????????) organized to help men and
women find good friends, and in most cases
lovers - Some join this kind of network mainly to develop
a virtual romance. A few informants admit that
they enjoy developing intimate online
relationships in this way - Miss Fung has started participating in the chat
room a few years ago, and has now become very
professional in searching suitable male
virtual partners - She usually chats with netizens for a while and
if she finds them interesting, they will exchange
mobile phone numbers and then keep in contact by
sending SMS
50Searching for netizens of the opposite-sex
- Though many informants claim that they are not
purposefully searching for romance, most of them
admit that it is much more fun to chat with
netizens of the opposite-sex - When asked about the gender of his online
friends, our male informant, Mr. Chung, says, of
course (chat) with girls who will chat with
guys? - Miss Fung also agrees that the feeling of talking
to members of the opposite-sex is much better
than with those of the same-sex. She explains, - Chatting with girls is not interesting it is
because girls have similar mind sets and will
talk about similar topics. But chatting with boys
will involve different topics, and those things
heard in the conversation will be meaningful and
interesting. - ???????????,????????????????,???????????????,?????
????????????
51Ambivalent relationships
- In some cases, the workers are not involved in
typical romance relationships, but they are
sending ambivalent messages with netizens or
other friends - This practice is more common among male workers,
who insist that they just find it playful to
write/receive such kind of messages - Mr. Ho likes to send SMS with girls though he
already has a close girlfriend, and the content
of the message reveals their intimate
relationship. Here is one of the examples, - Cutie you, what are you thinking of?
- ?????,??????
52Sweet words
- Our young female worker, Miss Fung, illustrates
the role that mobile cultures play in offering a
fantasyland that fulfills the sweet dreams of
many women - She is addicted to the sweet words heard in
this virtual space, such as I miss you, havent
met you for long. - In this online space, most (messages) are sweet
words and honeyed phrases. These cannot be heard
in real life...just like we sometimes say, wont
talk to you, no money left for the mobile phone,
then he will say, Ill help you to pay for it.
But (you know that) he wont really pay it for
you, (this is) just a sweet talk. - ?????????????,??????????????????????????,?????,??
???????,?????????,????????,???????
53Daydreams and fantasy
- This kind of ambivalent relationship and virtual
romance provide the workers with daydreams and
fantasy, which can be useful in consoling their
lonely spirits - As the workers dreamed, desired and determined to
live up to the hegemonic mode of life, they are
also yearning for love and sex to balance the
boring and sometimes frustrating work life - In our study, alienation seems to be lessened by
the sweet words and honeyed phrases in this
virtual reality created through mobile phones
54Absence of romance in reality
- This kind of pleasure obtained from virtual
romance fulfills workers (especially young
womens) desires for romantic love - Some of our informants are dissatisfied with
their love life in reality, for example, having
communication problems with their lovers - As Miss Fung points out in the above examples,
she enjoys the sweet words and honeyed phrases
that are absent in reality. She often compares
her virtual romance with the boring relationship
with her boyfriend in real life situations, and
criticizes her boyfriend as unromantic and
boring
55Absence of romance in reality
- What makes Miss Fung more frustrated is that her
boyfriend has no improvement even when he uses
other communicative means, such as SMS, which can
avoid face-to-face/voice-to-voice contexts - Now we just send one or two SMS in three or four
days. These days he sends me messages, ask me
what I am doinghe doesnt know how many words I
write for my netizens. I ask him what he is
doing he replies I am busy. When you say you
are busy, how can I continue to write? He says,
Chat later, I will chat with you when I come
back. I have high spirits originally, but then
lose them all after being discouraged by him. - ??????????????????,?????????,??????????????????,?
?????,?????,??????,???????,???????,???????,?
????,???????????????
56Influence on offline relationships
- Constructing virtual romance may have an
influence on real life love relations - In the case of Miss Fung, her boyfriend dislikes
her spending so much time and money on sending
SMS/chatting with other men - During that period he told me, I dislike you
chatting on the net. I ask why, he said it
particularly hurt a relationship. He doesnt know
how to say (sweet words). He believes that all I
heard online are sweet words and honeyed phrases,
which cannot be heard in real lifeit is because
things on the net are so insincere and (they)
hurt our relationship. But sometimes when I feel
annoyed alone, I will want to chat with someone.
- ?????????,??????????,?????,???????????????,???????
??????????,?????????????????????,???????,????????
?????,?????????
57Transient love relations
- In modern day China, many love relations are
transient and without commitment - They are rather light-minded, seems that when
love changes then just find another onemany
people consider (love) as a game, courting for a
period of time, and then separate without reason,
and then find another one very soon. - ?????????,???????????????????,???????,???????????
,?????????????? - Some of them (referring to young women) are not
so beautiful, they seem to be playing a love
game. But actually some men are very able too,
changing girlfriends every day. - ???????????,????????????????,??????????,??????????
?
58Online vs Offline
- Walther (1996) suggests the term hyperpersonal
interaction, which means that mediated
communication is more desirable as compared to
face-to-face interaction (Hoflich, 2003) - This kind of hyperpersonal interaction enables
migrant workers to develop ambivalent and even
intimate online relations with netizens - Nevertheless, as indicated in the case of Miss
Fung, virtual romance satisfies the desires for
being loved in the workers hearts but also
creates communicative problems (e.g. wrong
expectations, frequent quarrels) between real
lovers in reality
59Changing life aspirations of women
- One important phenomenon we see here is the
changing life aspirations, both in career and
love, of the young women in China - Many of them are now encouraged to go out and
leave their villages, look for their own love and
life (Pun, 2005) - Some of them have become active agents in pursing
their desired life, and hope to acquire both
individual freedom and a higher social status - In our study, it is found that women workers
often have more job opportunities than men, and
they even make more money than their male
counterparts
60Changing expectations of women
- The rising social status and increasing economic
power of women grant them more freedom in
marriage, and also in pursing ones life goals.
They are both eager and confident to choose a
better partner whom they really love. - These young working women will have higher
expectations on men, as their qualities have
improved and their social circles have enlarged - Miss Sung, a factory owner, believes that it is
difficult for a female worker to find a suitable
male partner in the workplace. - If you ask our (female) workers to choose a man
in the factory, (they) absolutely cannot choose
one. These men are poor and not good-looking
either. - ?????????????????,?????,???????,?????????
61Conclusion
- As shown in our study, the young migrant workers
need to seek fantasies and pleasures in their
leisure life - ambivalent relations and virtual romance
- strengthened or expanded social relations
- different types of consumption practices
- All help to balance the alienating and
individuating factory life, as well as to live a
completely new life as compared to the old times
in rural areas
62Pleasure offered by mobile cultures
- Through the use of mobile phone and SMS, these
migrant workers in China search for pleasure and
emotional release in their monotonous work life,
and take a break from the small social circles in
the factory world - Besides, they have been disciplined into a strong
discursive system of individualistic and
consumerist romance in capitalism, as they
participate in various consumption activities to
purchase an urban, modern identity
63Vicious cycle of consumption
- This repeats a vicious cycle as follows the
harder they work, the more they want to spend.
The more they desire to spend, the harder they
need to work (Pun, 2005 163) - Ma and Tse (2005) use a poem to vividly describe
their situation - Migrant workers have a vain hope for a new life,
- the modern lifestyle of the petty bourgeoisie.
- The myth for migrant workers to work hard
- Work Hard, Play Harder.
- Migrants workers seek pleasure and keep working
- Play hard, Work Even Harder.
64Limitations of online relations
- Another problem can be that the relationships
developed online may not be extended to the
reality, and they are just confined to and
sustained in the virtual context - Therefore, the perceived pleasure actually do not
seem to have any structural impact on workers
life -
- Most of the workers prefer enjoying the fantasies
purely and exclusively in virtual reality, and
not to know each other too deeply. As Miss Fung
says, - What does he look like, just imagine then its
okay, no need to know the details clearly. - ??????,????????,??????????
65Limitations of online relations
- Mr. Yen says, Sometimes, not meeting
face-to-face, then two people chat nicely, thats
okay. It may not be the case when (they) meet
face-to-facejust like we are ordinary friends,
chat (with each other), talk about work, talk
about personal love problems, (we) can chat and
share with each other. Once we meet, (we) may not
chat like that. - ????,??????,??????,???,????????????????????????,?
??,????????????????,????????????,?????????? - It seems that the pleasure obtained from
consumerism, including purchasing an urban
identity through a mobile phone and enjoying
virtual romance (particularly for working women)
absent in reality are superficial and transient.
66De-skilling and re-skilling
- The process of embracing tradition and modernity
is a harsh task for migrant workers, who may need
to adopt some tactics in coping with the clash
between the two discourses - According to Ma and Cheng, it involves both steps
of de-skilling and re-skilling, in order to
taste a temporary urban experience - The de-traditionalized and de-territorialized
migrant workers are de-skilling their rural
bodies and re-skilling themselves into urban
bodies which celebrate individualized intimate
relationships however, this de-skilling and
re-skilling are oftentimes re-worked in the
opposite direction. Migrant workers are trading
their vitality and youthfulness for a temporary
urban experience. (Ma and Cheng, forthcoming)
67Any way out?
- In this modern, urban, alienating workplace,
women have been presented as the major victims in
many academic discourses - Pun (2005) is rather pessimistic in concluding
the future life of the female migrant workers, as
she finds them under multiple and inescapable
oppressions - In our study, the women workers attitudes toward
pleasurable leisure life and new love/gender
relations reveal an attempt in breaking away from
the traditional fate of rural women - However, they might also be satisfying their
desires at a great price, without changing their
lives structurally
68Seemingly realizable dreams
- Their habit of over-spending, or we can say
addiction to consumption, makes them fall into
the trap of consumerism - Once they fall into this trap, they cannot get
out of it easily and become the victims of
capitalism - As Ma and Tse (2005 8) point out, the
middle-class/bourgeois lifestyle is actually an
illusion and a seemingly realizable dream for
grassroots workers. - Even though they are fancying the success of the
middle-classes, their factory life is completely
different from the work conditions of the real
middle-classes
69Unreachable dreams
- Virtual romance is also developed at the expenses
of their capacity to negotiate with real life
relations - As some of them (particularly women) enjoy
pleasurable romance online, they are even more
dissatisfied with the love relations in the
off-line world, and some may choose to ignore
their real life partners - They are given the chance of moving out of the
village, to get away from the traditional rural
peasantry lifestyle, and to pursue their career
and to search for free love - However, there are also some real life
constraints on them, which make the urban, modern
and middle-class lifestyles actually rather
unreachable for them
70Any alternative?
- Instead of being too celebrative of or optimistic
about their life choices, we should ask an
important question - Is there any alternative to these two lifestyles
(i.e. the rural peasantry lifestyle and urban
middle-class lifestyle)? - In order to open up more choices for migrant
workers, life education might be useful in
empowering them to make real resistance
71Suggestions
- Life education programs can be developed to help
these migrant workers explore alternatives ways
of living their lives, to empower the migrant
workers - tactics of unionizing or collective negotiation
with the employers for improving their working
conditions - Support social groups and networks can be formed
by different non-government organizations (NGO),
helping workers to increase their critical
awareness of their own situations, and to
discover alternative lifestyle choices and
possibilities - We should also pay attention to the psychological
health of the workers, especially that of women
workers, and to help them develop and maintain
good social/heterosexual relations in real life
situations
72Conclusion
- To conclude, mobile cultures and other
consumption practices seem to offer a symbol of
urban identity, a taste of cosmopolitan
lifestyle, and a convenient medium for social
contact as well as virtual romance - However, all these perceived pleasures are
transient and in most cases cannot initiate
long-term changes in the lives of migrant workers - They may even bring with them undesirable
consequences, for example, driving them to work
harder and harder to sustain the expensive
city lifestyle, and also hurting the real
relationships developed in the off-line world
73Conclusion
- Life education programmes can also include some
literacy interest groups (e.g., based on their
SMS creative interests), which can help them to
improve their literacy skills. This may enable
them in the long run to leave the factory and
find other jobs (e.g. finding some white-collar
or semi-white-collar work) - This kind of education/support should be offered
to both men and women - This can help them to understand more about the
gender relations and communicative practices
(both on-line and off-line) of each other, and to
choose the appropriate ways of expressing ones
feelings (developing both the linguistic and
literacy skills to do so) and to develop workable
ways of relating to and understanding each other
74Future studies
- Further studies can also work on the different
cultural and social practices of male and female
workers to help them explore more about their own
needs and situations, and to enable them to build
more harmonious gender relations in the rapidly
changing Chinese society today - Much more work, both of the research and social
activist kinds, needs to be embarked on in the
near future
75- The End
- Feedback and Comments Welcome