Local Shops in Global Shanghai
Shanghai has been “rising” as a global city since the early 1990s. Its glitzing skyscrapers and glamorous malls now dominate the urban landscape. Yet small ordinary local shops, which date back to Shanghai’s first cosmopolitan era of the 1920s and disappeared after 1949, have re-emerged across the city, amounting to a massive commercial development from below. Why and how have local shops developed during the large-scale urban transformations planned and driven by a strong state? How do local shops in Shanghai differ from their counterparts in the five other global cities in this transnational comparative project and its resultant book?
To address these and other questions, a small research team of Shanghai and U.S.-based sociologists have completed a comparative study of two distinctive shopping streets—Tianzifang and Minxinglu—located in the downtown and outlying areas of Shanghai respectively. An exclusive zone of art studios, boutique shops, and high-end cafes, Tianzifang caters to international tourists and wealthy local consumers primarily. A linear street occupied by convenience stores, cheap eateries, and other small businesses owned by migrants, Minxinglu serves the daily needs of the lower-income local community. The research has shown that despite these important differences reflecting the diversity of local shops, both Tianzifang and Minxinglu are shaped by the structural forces of globalization, migration, and the strong state. Moreover, Tianzifang and Minxinglu have evolved into local commercial and social spaces that endure or thrive as an integral part of communal life in global Shanghai.
Xiangming Chen
Gallery with photos from Shanghai:
Click here to view the photos on Flickr
Photos from the Local Shops Workshop, Shanghai, and researchers:
Click here to view the photos on Flickr
Photos from talk at the Center for Modern Chinese City Studies at East China Normal University, Shanghai, October 22, 2015:
Click here to view the photos on Flickr
Here is the link to a feature (in Chinese) about the book talk at East China Normal University, Shanghai, October 22, 2015.
Photos of Xiangming Chen’s presentation on the Chinese edition of the book at the Global Cities Forum at Shanghai Jiao Tong University (SJTU), Shanghai, October 30, 2016:
The program of the Global Cities Forum where Chen presented the book is here.
Chen was the main speaker about the book at Tongji University, Shanghai, December 23, 2016.
Click here to view the photos on Flickr
Chen was the main speaker about the book at Bancheng Bookstore, Shanghai, December 24, 2016.
Click here to view the photos on Flickr
A detailed report about this event in Chinese is here.
Chen spoke about the book at Beijing Academy of Social Sciences, Beijing, January 11, 2017.
Click here to view the photos on Flickr