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            Today’s chinese fad consumption is col-
            lective and individual

                If the first national goods wave was for the surviv-
            al of China, the impetus behind the current one is much
            simpler and clearer: good look, strong interest, intrigu-
            ing connotation, cheap price, so why not? Some attri-
            bute this phenomena to the national wealth and cultur-
            al  confidence.  If  we  only  look  at  it  from  this  single
            dimension, it would be difficult to see the whole picture.
                When the global pandemic broke out at the end
            of  2019,  the  Chinese  government  took  a  series  of
            protective measures to control the movement in a bid
            to reduce unnecessary travel. This resulted in a plum-
            met in international, inter-provincial and inter-city
            trips,  while  citizens  spent  increasingly  more  time
            online for remote lessons, shopping, medical advice
            and entertainment. The “cloud-based XX” became a
            trend. The sound national cooperation supports Chi-
            na to outperform most countries in epidemic control,
            whether it was patient clearance or economic recov-
            ery.  In  the  global  system,  cultural  confidence  has
            always been associated with economic development.
                At the very beginning, the Chinese fad was not
            positively popular.
                The early mass application of Chinese elements
            came from foreign luxury brands. To please the Chi-
            nese market, some brands launched limited products
            for Chinese New Year, which was opposite to the then
            mainstream  aesthetics  in  China  including  Japanese
            minimalist style and Nordic normcore. The exagger-
            ated foreign interpretation of Chinese elements was
            mocked  as  “netherworld  design”,  until  domestic
            brands led by Li-Ning brought designs with Chinese
            aesthetics  to  the  international  stage.  The  cultural
            output excited Chinese consumers, marking the ad-
            vent of Chinese fad 2.0. For a variety of reasons, the
            public aesthetics of Chinese fad has changed drasti-
            cally in recent years, from only acceptability of Li-
            Ning’s minimalist design, to the concept of “extreme
            corny is trendy”, and to the “renaissance” of y2k-style                                                         With a close look, we will find the Chinese
            including  the  Tang  and  Song  style  popular  on  TV
            shows.  Even  the  previous  niche  elements  have  cap-                                                                  fad under coffee and tea drinks more
            tured  a  group  of  fans.  This  means  that  the  Chinese
            fad begins to show subdivision and inclusion.                                                                  interesting. It can unify the taste of young
                With a close look, we will find the Chinese fad
            under coffee and tea drinks more interesting. It can                                                            people across the country, but also define
            unify  the  taste  of  young  people  across  the  country,
            but  also  define  individual  choice  within  a  province                                                  individual choice within a province or a city.
            or a city.




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