Researching digital communication practices among German-speaking expats in China: Study design

Authors

  • Michael Szurawitzki University of Duisburg-Essen

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33910/2686-830X-2019-1-1-22-29

Keywords:

WeChat, communication, German-speaking expats, China, study design

Abstract

The present paper develops the study design of a linguistic analysis of digital communication practices among German-speaking expats in China using WeChat. Within digital communication in China, the messenger application WeChat is the most widely used means of communication, boasting roughly one billion users. There has not been relevant linguistic research on communication making use of this application to date. We especially lack studies addressing the communication practices with WeChat by native speakers of German, who form a relatively large group of expatriates in China (20,000+ Germans alone), mostly working in the automobile industry.

After a short introduction (1.) which addresses the relevant research question to be tackled, the previous research on WeChat is summarized (2.). The attention WeChat has received in the media of the German language area becomes visible, but we can also see that there is no systematic scholarly discourse focusing on the application just yet. This is followed by a section on the communicative features and functionality of WeChat (3.): here it is pointed out that WeChat has multiple functions which go significantly further than messaging applications such as WhatsApp provide their users. These features comprise e.g. online payment, GPS tracking and navigation, money transfers, and monetary gifts. Furthermore, WeChat combines features of WhatsApp, Facebook, and Twitter. A thorough description of these features provides the basis for laying out the study design of the online survey (4.). The online survey comprises more than twenty questions on the use of WeChat with special regard to the expatriate setting in China. The paper ends with a section on the expected results (5.).

References

REFERENCES

Albert, G. (2015) Semiotik und Syntax von Emoticons. Zeitschrift fur Angewandte Linguistik, Bd. 62, H. 1, S. 3–22. DOI: 10.1515/zfal-2015-0001 (In German)

Ankenbrand, H. (2018) Chinas Uberwachungsapp drangt in die Welt. Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, 15 Januar 2018. [Online]. Available at: http://m.faz.net/aktuell/wirtschaft/diginomics/chinas-ueberwachungsapp-draengtin-die-welt-15400334.html (accessed 16.06.2019). (In German)

Danesi, M. (2017) The semiotics of emoji. The rise of visual language in the age of the Internet. London; New York: Bloomsbury, 208 p. (In English)

Dresner, E., Herring, S. (2010) Functions of the nonverbal in CMC. Emoticons and illocutionary force. Communication Theory, vol. 20, no. 3, pp. 249–268. DOI: 10.1111/j.1468-2885.2010.01362.x (In English)

Durscheid, Ch., Frick, K. (2016) Schreiben digital. Wie das Internet unsere Alltagskommunikation verandert. Stuttgart: Alfred Kroner Verlag, 156 S. (In German)

Durscheid, Ch., Siever, Ch. M. (2017) Jenseits des Alphabets — Kommunikation mit Emojis. Zeitschrift fur Germanistische Linguistik, Bd. 45, H. 2, S. 256–285. (In German)

Jungclaussen, J. F. (2017) Facebook zerstort die Demokratie. Interview mit Niall Ferguson. Die Zeit, Nr. 53, 20. Dezember. [Online]. Available at: https://www.zeit.de/2017/53/soziale-netzwerke-facebook-macht-niallferguson-historiker (accessed 16.06.2019). (In German)

Ge, J., Herring, S. C. (2018) Communicative functions of emoji sequences on Sina Weibo. First Monday, vol. 23, no. 11, 5 November. DOI: 10.5210/fm.v23i11.9413 (In English)

Gu, W. Dissertation project on stickers in WhatsApp and WeChat. University of Zurich. (In preparation). (In German)

Gunthner, S. (2018) Perspektiven einer sprach- und kulturvergleichenden Interaktionsforschung: Chinesische und deutsche Praktiken nominaler Selbstreferenz in SMS-, WhatsApp- und WeChat-Interaktionen. Gesprächsforschung — Online-Zeitschrift zur verbalen Interaktion, Ausgabe 19, S. 478–514. [Online]. Available at: http://www.gespraechsforschung-online.de/fileadmin/dateien/heft2018/ga-guenthner.pdf (accessed 16.06.2019). (In German)

Heath, A. (2017) Mark Zuckerberg is back in China as Facebook eyes opportunity to finally enter the country. Business Insider India, 28 October. [Online]. Available at: https://www.businessinsider.in/mark-zuckerberg-isback-in-china-as-facebook-eyes-opportunity-to-finally-enter-the-country/articleshow/61311767.cms (accessed 16.06.2019). (In English)

Hirn, W. (2018) Chinas Bosse. Unsere unbekannten Konkurrenten. Fr./M.: Campus Verlag, 284 S. (In German)

Kirchner, R. (2018) Vom Mikroblog zur Uberwachungs-App — soziale Medien in China. Informationen zur politischen Bildung, Nr. 337, S. 60. (In German)

Liu, Yi. (2018) Social Media Marketing in China mit WeChat. Einsatzmoglichkeiten, Funktionen und Tools fur ein erfolgreiches Mobile Business. Heidelberg: Springer, XIX, 247 S. DOI: 10.1007/978-3-658-17497-2 (In German)

Ljubešic, N., Fišer, D. (2016) A global analysis of emoji usage. In: The 54th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics. Proceedings of the 10th Web as Corpus Workshop (WAC-X) and the EmpiriST Shared. Berlin: s. n., pp. 82–89. (In English)

Pappert, S. (2017) Zu kommunikativen Funktionen von Emojis in der WhatsApp-Kommunikation. In: M. Bei.wenger (ed.). Empirische Erforschung internetbasierter Kommunikation. Berlin: De Gruyter, S. 175–211. DOI: 10.1515/9783110567786 (In German)

Sieren, F. (2018) Zukunft? China! Wie die neue Supermacht unser Leben, unsere Politik, unsere Wirtschaft verandert. Munchen: Penguin, 366 S. (In German)

Strittmatter, K. (2018) Die Neuerfindung der Diktatur. Wie China den digitalen Uberwachungsstaat aufbaut und uns damit herausfordert. Munchen: Piper, 288 S. (In German)

Szurawitzki, M. (2016) Zur Kulturspezifik von Emojis. Der Sprachdienst, Nr. 2, S. 64–66. (In German)

Szurawitzki, M. (2018) Burokratie und organisationale Schriftlichkeit. In: S. Habscheid, A. Muller, A. Wilton (Hg.). Sprache in Organisationen. Berlin; Boston: De Gruyter, S. 126–144. (Handbucher Sprachwissen 14). DOI: 10.1515/9783110296235-007 (In German)

Szurawitzki, M., Wang, C., Zhang, L. (2019) WeChat — Funktionsweise, technische Moglichkeiten und Emoji-Kommunikation. Zeitschrift fur Literaturwissenschaft und Linguistik, Jg. 49, 4/2019. (In press). (In German)

Vietor, M. (2017) Mail on German visa information for Chinese citizens via WeChat. [Online]. Available at: http://mp.weixin.qq.com/s/ZI6LNJnzTS4qlGHenaAGeA (accessed 19.06.2017). (In German)

Wu, Yi., Trautsch, Ch. (2015) Die Struktur und Funktion von mimischen Emotikons in Deutschland und China. Zeitschrift fur Semiotik, Bd. 37, H. 1–2, S. 177–187. (In German)

Wurzel, S. (2017) WeChat gefallt Apple gar nicht. [Online]. Available at: http://www.tagesschau.de/ausland/wechat-101.html (accessed at 16.06.2017). (In German)

Zand, B. (2016) Das totale Netzwerk. Der Spiegel, Nr. 41, 8 October, S. 92–94. Available at: https://magazin.spiegel.de/EpubDelivery/spiegel/pdf/147238342 (accessed at 16.06.2019). (In German)

Zhou, R., Hentschel, J., Kumar, N. (2017) Goodbye Text, Hello Emoji: Mobile Communication on WeChat in China. In: CHI ’17 Proceedings of the 2017 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems. Denver, Colorado, USA — May 06–11, 2017. New York: ACM, pp. 748–759. DOI: 10.1145/3025453.3025800 (In English)

Published

2019-10-23

Issue

Section

Linguistics and Interdisciplinary Research in Language and Discourse