Abstract

This paper examines the development of Chinese social media platforms and corresponding socio-economic indicators. Applying Bourdieu's concepts of cultural capital and Fukuyama’s concepts of social capital, this paper analyzes various social media platforms and their impact on mobility across social classes in China. Government regulations are highly involved in Chinese social media platforms. Through measuring education, consumption, income inequality, social mobility, and other related socio-economic indicators, this paper argues that the emergence of social media platforms revolutionizes the traditional social class structure and results in a unique social stratification in China. Social media platforms empower upper classes, middle classes, and working classes differently. This paper's central proposition is that the rise of social media blurs boundaries between middle and working classes, but strengthens the upper classes' distinctiveness and further consolidates their capital. The models applied in this paper advances our understanding of the rise of social media and its role in advocating for social mobility while also its role in facilitating class consolidation.

Highlights

  • Social media involves, exponential growth of the online community with active users, and exchanging and trading information, goods, and skills (Heinrichs, 2013) via personal and commercial channels

  • As Du (2014) suggests, the use of terms such as “lower classes” “middle class” and “upper class” as delineations of social classes are inadequate in the case of China because China’s political and economic structure is a form of state capitalism

  • This paper combines tangible derivation from culture capital and social capital to illustrate to what extent social media platforms in China affect social classes in either class stratification or class structure

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Summary

Introduction

Exponential growth of the online community with active users, and exchanging and trading information, goods, and skills (Heinrichs, 2013) via personal and commercial channels. Cases of Chinese social media platforms expanding globally shows that channels of cultural output have taken various forms and have engaged with more than 829 million internet users (CNNIC, 2019). Social media created information; including, social, cultural, and capital streams, is unique in China.

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