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Mobilizing care? WeChat for older adults’ digital kinship and informal care in Wuhan households

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 23:21 authored by Haiqing YuHaiqing Yu, Ge Zhang, Larissa HjorthLarissa Hjorth
The COVID-19 pandemic saw the digital amplify all aspects of our lives—work, sociality, health, intimacy, care, and inequality. In a time of restrictions and physical distancing, the role of the digital for social inclusion—especially for older adults—was heightened with many having to care at a distance. Our study focuses on older adults from Wuhan and the role of the dominant social media app, WeChat, for intergenerational informal care through digital literacy during and after the pandemic. Often characterized in global media as the place where the virus began, many of the quotidian experiences of Wuhan people have been overlooked. We reflect upon ethnographic fieldwork conducted in Wuhan in 2020–2021 with 10 households. We are particularly interested in how kinship care practices in Wuhan households—as sites for complex configurations of intergenerational practices that converge digital, social, and material worlds—have shifted during the pandemic. We ask: what are the learnings, opportunities and limitations around smartphone apps like WeChat for informal care as part of filial piety? In sum, what are the possibilities and limitations for mobilizing care?

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Related Materials

  1. 1.
    DOI - Is published in 10.1177/20501579221150716
  2. 2.
    ISSN - Is published in 20501579

Journal

Mobile Media and Communication

Volume

11

Issue

2

Start page

294

End page

311

Total pages

18

Publisher

Sage

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© The Author(s) 2023

Former Identifier

2006122842

Esploro creation date

2023-06-18

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