Volkswagen Cars, Politics, and Culture in the Post-1978 China: The Social Construction of Success

Volkswagen (VW) is one of the first foreign carmakers that made direct investments in China after 1978. From its entry in the Chinese market to the year of 2009, VW enjoyed popularity, high reputation, and undisputed leadership in the Chinese passenger car market, and achieved a great commercial suc...

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Main Author: Qiu, Xiaolan
Other Authors: Science and Technology Studies
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/51150
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-02222012-213650/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-511502020-09-26T05:34:25Z Volkswagen Cars, Politics, and Culture in the Post-1978 China: The Social Construction of Success Qiu, Xiaolan Science and Technology Studies Luke, Timothy W. Breslau, Daniel Fuhrman, Ellsworth R. Halfon, Saul E. China sociology of technology technology policy Shanghai-Volkswagen Volkswagen Volkswagen (VW) is one of the first foreign carmakers that made direct investments in China after 1978. From its entry in the Chinese market to the year of 2009, VW enjoyed popularity, high reputation, and undisputed leadership in the Chinese passenger car market, and achieved a great commercial success. Most previous accounts attribute VW’s success in China to VW’s wise business operation or Chinese government’s support. This study guided by the methods and theories of technology studies, especially the actor-network theory (ANT), takes into account technical, socioeconomic, political, or cultural factors simultaneously. By selecting one of VW’s successful joint ventures with China – Shanghai Volkswagen (SVW) – as a case to do in-depth investigation, it examines the relationship between heterogeneous actors (both humans and nonhumans) and the pathways of SVW development, and has found that all of the SVW establishment, production, marketing, and development were shaped by a range of diverse social and material actors, including the central planners, local government, VW, local suppliers, Chinese consumers, and VW cars, and depended on Chinese particular political and cultural context; VW’s success in China presents a story of co-construction of power and actor-networks. Ph. D. 2014-12-18T21:09:05Z 2014-12-18T21:09:05Z 2012-02-13 2012-02-22 2014-12-16 2012-03-06 Dissertation etd-02222012-213650 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/51150 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-02222012-213650/ Qiu_X_D_2012.pdf Qiu_X_D_2012_Copyright.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic China
sociology of technology
technology policy
Shanghai-Volkswagen
Volkswagen
spellingShingle China
sociology of technology
technology policy
Shanghai-Volkswagen
Volkswagen
Qiu, Xiaolan
Volkswagen Cars, Politics, and Culture in the Post-1978 China: The Social Construction of Success
description Volkswagen (VW) is one of the first foreign carmakers that made direct investments in China after 1978. From its entry in the Chinese market to the year of 2009, VW enjoyed popularity, high reputation, and undisputed leadership in the Chinese passenger car market, and achieved a great commercial success. Most previous accounts attribute VW’s success in China to VW’s wise business operation or Chinese government’s support. This study guided by the methods and theories of technology studies, especially the actor-network theory (ANT), takes into account technical, socioeconomic, political, or cultural factors simultaneously. By selecting one of VW’s successful joint ventures with China – Shanghai Volkswagen (SVW) – as a case to do in-depth investigation, it examines the relationship between heterogeneous actors (both humans and nonhumans) and the pathways of SVW development, and has found that all of the SVW establishment, production, marketing, and development were shaped by a range of diverse social and material actors, including the central planners, local government, VW, local suppliers, Chinese consumers, and VW cars, and depended on Chinese particular political and cultural context; VW’s success in China presents a story of co-construction of power and actor-networks. === Ph. D.
author2 Science and Technology Studies
author_facet Science and Technology Studies
Qiu, Xiaolan
author Qiu, Xiaolan
author_sort Qiu, Xiaolan
title Volkswagen Cars, Politics, and Culture in the Post-1978 China: The Social Construction of Success
title_short Volkswagen Cars, Politics, and Culture in the Post-1978 China: The Social Construction of Success
title_full Volkswagen Cars, Politics, and Culture in the Post-1978 China: The Social Construction of Success
title_fullStr Volkswagen Cars, Politics, and Culture in the Post-1978 China: The Social Construction of Success
title_full_unstemmed Volkswagen Cars, Politics, and Culture in the Post-1978 China: The Social Construction of Success
title_sort volkswagen cars, politics, and culture in the post-1978 china: the social construction of success
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/51150
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-02222012-213650/
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