{"title":"Social Media Imaginaries and the City: How the Attention Economy Is Reshaping Urban Built Environments","authors":"Petter Törnberg","doi":"10.1177/20563051251323389","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Social media are becoming a growing presence in our cities, filtering our experience of urban place and enabling locations to “go viral.” This article examines the downstream consequences of this new reality, examining how the urban actors who shape the city consider social media in their work. Drawing on ethnographic research and interviews with elite investors in São Paulo’s gentrifying Centro neighborhood, this article finds that social media are ever-present force in the production of the city. The capacity of social media to shape imaginaries and steer flows of people—and therefore flows of capital—have emerged as a powerful economic logic, integral to the city’s economic machinery. In pursuit of online attention, investors are adapting the city to fit their understanding of what “works” on social media—changing not only superficial designs and aesthetics, but even in which buildings they invest. Restaurants and bars come to function as intermediaries for the exchange of <jats:italic>attention capital</jats:italic> : they purchase attention from influencers, in turn marketing it to their customers and exchanging accumulated digital clout for free beer and new kitchens from their suppliers. Attention is transforming the very built environment of the city, which in turn provides essential physical infrastructure for the attention economy. While social media platforms may be diverse in their biases and characteristics, this article argues that the imperative of data accumulation has produced an era in which everything—even our cities—is shaped by the pursuit of attention.","PeriodicalId":47920,"journal":{"name":"Social Media + Society","volume":"21 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":5.5000,"publicationDate":"2025-03-12","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Social Media + Society","FirstCategoryId":"98","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1177/20563051251323389","RegionNum":1,"RegionCategory":"文学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"COMMUNICATION","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Social media are becoming a growing presence in our cities, filtering our experience of urban place and enabling locations to “go viral.” This article examines the downstream consequences of this new reality, examining how the urban actors who shape the city consider social media in their work. Drawing on ethnographic research and interviews with elite investors in São Paulo’s gentrifying Centro neighborhood, this article finds that social media are ever-present force in the production of the city. The capacity of social media to shape imaginaries and steer flows of people—and therefore flows of capital—have emerged as a powerful economic logic, integral to the city’s economic machinery. In pursuit of online attention, investors are adapting the city to fit their understanding of what “works” on social media—changing not only superficial designs and aesthetics, but even in which buildings they invest. Restaurants and bars come to function as intermediaries for the exchange of attention capital : they purchase attention from influencers, in turn marketing it to their customers and exchanging accumulated digital clout for free beer and new kitchens from their suppliers. Attention is transforming the very built environment of the city, which in turn provides essential physical infrastructure for the attention economy. While social media platforms may be diverse in their biases and characteristics, this article argues that the imperative of data accumulation has produced an era in which everything—even our cities—is shaped by the pursuit of attention.
期刊介绍:
Social Media + Society is an open access, peer-reviewed scholarly journal that focuses on the socio-cultural, political, psychological, historical, economic, legal and policy dimensions of social media in societies past, contemporary and future. We publish interdisciplinary work that draws from the social sciences, humanities and computational social sciences, reaches out to the arts and natural sciences, and we endorse mixed methods and methodologies. The journal is open to a diversity of theoretic paradigms and methodologies. The editorial vision of Social Media + Society draws inspiration from research on social media to outline a field of study poised to reflexively grow as social technologies evolve. We foster the open access of sharing of research on the social properties of media, as they manifest themselves through the uses people make of networked platforms past and present, digital and non. The journal presents a collaborative, open, and shared space, dedicated exclusively to the study of social media and their implications for societies. It facilitates state-of-the-art research on cutting-edge trends and allows scholars to focus and track trends specific to this field of study.