Xiaohongshu and the Digital Infrastructure of Global China

Xiaohongshu and the Digital Infrastructure of Global China

Dr Carwyn Morris discusses Xiaohongshu and the digital Infrastructure of global China, drawing on a paper co-authored with Dr Yuchen Chen.

By Manchester China Institute

Date and time

Location

Manchester China Institute

178 Waterloo Place University of Manchester Manchester M13 9PL United Kingdom

About this event

  • Event lasts 1 hour 30 minutes

Taking place at the intersection of media studies, global China studies, and critical infrastructure studies, this talk uses experiences from China, Germany, the UK, and the US to understand and consider how the social media service, Xiaohongshu, functions as a form of transnational connective infrastructure which supports the global mobility of Chinese capital while operating across digital territories.

As the literature on infrastructure studies highlights, infrastructure becomes particularly visible during infrastructural breakdowns, and as Chinese citizens become disconnected from China’s digital infrastructure Xiaohongshu becomes an essential tool for navigating and understanding the world. Xiaohongshu helps Chinese actors operate and connect globally, influences how they experience the world, and enables new connections to be made.

Xiaohongshu’s effects are particularly visible in the cultural industries, where users share, discuss, and support businesses that offer experiences that resonate with Chinese consumers. At the same time, Xiaohongshu helps Chinese capital become active globally, it supports Chinese capital investment, and it helps investors triangulate sites for investment. During this process, Xiaohongshu both supports global mobility and individual attempts to stay global.

This, we argue, also makes Xiaohongshu an infrastructure of displacement, with Xiaohongshu users supporting ventures that displace existing space users through new cultural geographies of Chineseness.

The analysis that this method builds off uses wanghong (internet fame) as a methodological starting point for understanding global China, and the talk elaborates on this methodological starting point.

ABOUT THE AUTHORS

Carwyn Morris (presenter) is a Senior Lecturer in Media Studies at SOAS University of London.

Yuchen Chen is an Assistant Professor at CUNY Baruch, New York.

Accessibility

The MCI is a listed building and therefore does not have any lifts. Please note that you must use the stairs in order to access the venue and the toilets.

Photography

The organisers will be taking photos during this event. If you prefer not to be included in any photos, kindly inform the organisers before the event starts.

Organized by

The Manchester China Institute (MCI) promotes excellence in China studies at the University of Manchester. MCI hosts in-person talks, workshops, and roundtables, and well as webinars with a global reach. Our public events are free and open to all. The University of Manchester is committed to academic independence and the freedom of speech. The views speakers present are entirely their own, and do not represent those of the University of Manchester or the Manchester China Institute and its directors.

Free
Nov 25 · 12:30 PM GMT