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This edited volume is first of its kind to document and critically
analyse the changes took place snice China’s opening-up and
reform and its impact on Dongbei, China’s North-East region,
known for its remote and vast landscape, unique and othered
culture, rich resources, mighty infrastructures and industries,
geopolitical significance. Through presenting up-to-date and
multidimensional case studies, the book covers three major aspects
of Dongbei, which put people at the heart of our scholarly focus,
namely people’s mediated life through traditional and new media;
people’s social, cultural, and living spaces; artistic and
fictional representations of people’s everyday life.
This book looks at the recent emergence of "new ordinary
consumption," in urban China and defines new ordinary consumption
as a consumer practice in which people routinely integrate products
and items, traditionally reserved for special occasions, into their
daily lives, to accentuate their own well-being. The book, through
the case study on the adoption of cut flowers and upscaling
non-floral goods, provides insights on how deal proneness and high
price sensitivity pose challenges to many market retailers. It also
proposes how to go about resolving these challenging issues in
retail through the alteration of perceived reasons to consume. The
author also examined social media marketing narrative that two
direct-to-consumer floral goods sellers used, to guide consumers
away from the social and cultural baggage of consumption, thereby
giving more consideration to products reshaping consumers'
motivation, and driving the purchase. Heeding the findings of
floral startups that awakened consumers' aspirations to redefine
their everyday personal lives, and making such aspirations a
profitable business, this interesting case study suggests that it
is time to revisit the appeal of conspicuous consumption in the
present-day Chinese markets. Anyone interested to learn more about
the Chinese consumers and their novel consumption habits would find
the book a useful reference.
This book looks at the recent emergence of "new ordinary
consumption," in urban China and defines new ordinary consumption
as a consumer practice in which people routinely integrate products
and items, traditionally reserved for special occasions, into their
daily lives, to accentuate their own well-being. The book, through
the case study on the adoption of cut flowers and upscaling
non-floral goods, provides insights on how deal proneness and high
price sensitivity pose challenges to many market retailers. It also
proposes how to go about resolving these challenging issues in
retail through the alteration of perceived reasons to consume. The
author also examined social media marketing narrative that two
direct-to-consumer floral goods sellers used, to guide consumers
away from the social and cultural baggage of consumption, thereby
giving more consideration to products reshaping consumers'
motivation, and driving the purchase. Heeding the findings of
floral startups that awakened consumers' aspirations to redefine
their everyday personal lives, and making such aspirations a
profitable business, this interesting case study suggests that it
is time to revisit the appeal of conspicuous consumption in the
present-day Chinese markets. Anyone interested to learn more about
the Chinese consumers and their novel consumption habits would find
the book a useful reference.
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