Something went wrong
Please try again
Digital Parenting Burdens in China
Some error occured while loading the Quick View. Please close the Quick View and try reloading the page.
Couldn't load pickup availability
- Format:
-
06 June 2024

The ebook edition of this title is Open Access and freely available to read online.
As a world leader in technology, China’s adoption of trend-setting innovations has led to the encroachment of digital technologies into the home. Digital Parenting Burdens in China is the first English language book to explore the impact of digitalisation on family life in China, including the phenomenon of ‘punch-in culture’ and its implications for family wellbeing. In an era of heightened digital connectivity via parent-teacher and parent-parent chatgroups and homework apps, how are Chinese parents coping with the challenges of parental accountability, peer pressure and performative parenting?
Delving into 90 interviews from both before and during the Covid-19 pandemic, authors Sun Sun Lim and Yang Wang provide rich vignettes of family life in urban Chinese households in Beijing and Hangzhou to demonstrate how parents appropriate technology as they raise their children, steer them towards the social aspirations of academic achievement, and navigate the rocky terrains of children’s home-based learning during the pandemic lockdowns. Empirically grounded and theoretically informed, these vivid accounts serve as valuable insights into understanding how family life around is shifting in the face of digitalisation not only in China, but globally.
SOCIAL SCIENCE / Media Studies, Media studies: internet, digital media and society, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Children's Studies, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology / Marriage & Family, Sociology: family and relationships, Age groups: children
'Lim & Wang’s book provides us with a rare peek into the world of family life in China, a global technological leader, as it is embracing digitalization in all aspects of its life: Parenting, education, leisure, and social relationships. Their thoughtful empirically based observations in this unique culture are highly valuable for readers worldwide well beyond China as they raise the challenges and opportunities facing all families adjusting to the ever-changing digital advancements in their everyday lives.'
Sun Sun Lim is Vice President, Partnerships & Engagement and Professor of Communication and Technology at Singapore Management University.
Yang Wang is Research Fellow at Asia Research Institute at National University of Singapore.
Chapter 1. Digital Parenting: Why the Chinese Experience Matters
Chapter 2. Digitalisation of Family Life in China
Chapter 3. Parental Accountability and Punch-in Culture
Chapter 4. Performative Parenting and Peer Pressure
Chapter 5. Digital Parenting Burdens and Family Wellbeing