From online to onsite: Wanghong economy as the new engine driving China's urban development

被引:9
作者
Cao, Liu [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Xian Jiaotong Liverpool Univ, Dept China Studies, Xian, Peoples R China
[2] Xian Jiaotong Liverpool Univ, Sch Humanities & Social Sci, Dept China Studies, HS353 Humanities & Social Sci Bldg, Suzhou 215123, Jiangsu, Peoples R China
来源
ENVIRONMENT AND PLANNING A-ECONOMY AND SPACE | 2024年 / 56卷 / 04期
基金
中国国家自然科学基金;
关键词
Platform urbanism; wanghong economy; urban consumption; everyday life; urban China; CULTURAL-ECONOMY; CREATIVE CITIES; INDUSTRIES; EMPLOYMENT;
D O I
10.1177/0308518X231224142
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Considering China's 'isolated' digital ecosystem, this paper examines China's 'check-in' activities to understand how the wanghong economy is driving China's new rounds of urban development, with the purpose of supplementing existing research on digital economies from the Chinese context. Focusing on a representative case study area called Dongshankou in Guangzhou, which is regarded as one of the most popular wanghong places and an emerging commercial centre, I sought to enrich existing studies about digital economies and extend scholarship on platform urbanism from the cultural economy perspective. First, I argue that Chinese consumers' check-in activities function as the data accumulation process, structuring Dongshankou's digital capital through the assemblage of online posts and geotags. Therefore, Dongshankou's urban development challenges the conventional view of creativity as the key factor in the cultural economy for urban development, given that digital capital is now the key driver for urban development in the digital age. Second, the growth of wanghong stores in Dongshankou reveals how the wanghong economy is materialised into urban cultural objects. Emotional value - a crucial selling point that these wanghong stores aim to provide to facilitate consumers' check-in activities - illustrates how China's highly participatory digital ecosystem extracts users' emotions and bodily experiences into the process of capital accumulation, which structures the 'platform urbanism' through our daily lives. This paper broadens the horizon for an alternative theoretical agenda in platform urbanism: beyond focusing solely on platform algorithms, how digital platforms and emotions become inextricably linked in economic production should be further explored.
引用
收藏
页码:1061 / 1076
页数:16
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