Haowei Luo & Hua Yu:'I call myself a five (rubbish/loser), but I don' t really want to be': online identity and translanguaging play in social media

发布者:中国外语战略研究中心发布时间:2026-06-28浏览次数:10

标题:Translanguaging play and loser identity negotiation: creativity, precariousness, and collective resilience in a Chinese online community

作者:Haowei Luo (Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures, Tsinghua University)、Hua Yu (Institute of Language Sciences, Shanghai International Studies University)

摘要:Failure or being a loser are identities not openly recognized or acceptable in a merit-driven society, especially for top university students. This study investigates the role of translanguaging play in negotiating identities related to precarious life experiences within a Chinese online community on Douban. Drawing on discourse-centered online ethnography (DCOE) and Moment Analysis, we explore how 'loser' identities are negotiated, destabilized, and subverted through homophonic wordplay on 'five'. The findings reveal that participants employ translanguaging play to reclaim the 'five' label in self-deprecation, develop 'five lexicology' to build solidarity, and oscillate between 'being a five' and 'de-fiving' under meritocratic pressures. These demonstrate participants' creativity in deploying diverse semiotic resources alongside metalinguistic and genre knowledge. We further argue that psychological distance between named languages itself constitutes a translanguaging resource for identity work, as the affective gap between English five and Chinese fēiwù (rubbish/loser) enables participants to re-represent failure through a register of playful lightness. Translanguaging play thus carves out a safe space in which vulnerability can be voiced, ascribed identities transcended, and resilience cultivated against uncertainty.

关键词:translanguaging play, online identity, precarity, creativity

来源:《Applied Linguistics》2026, 00, 1-18

欢迎引用:Luo, H., & Yu, H. (2026). Translanguaging play and loser identity negotiation: creativity, precariousness, and collective resilience in a Chinese online community. Applied Linguistics, 00(0), 1-18. https://doi.org/10.1093/applin/amag046


 

关闭