News Express: UM professor publishes new book about Macao

新聞快訊:澳大教授研究澳門著作出版

 

Betting on Macau: Casino Capitalism and China’s Consumer Revolution

 


澳大教授研究澳門著作出版

澳門大學社會科學學院傳播系副教授Tim Simpson的著作《Betting on Macau: Casino Capitalism and China’s Consumer Revolution》由明尼蘇達大學出版社正式出版。該書探討澳門憑藉博彩業轉型成為世界上收入最豐厚的賭城,以及澳門這座城市在中國蛻變為全球最龐大消費社會過程中所扮演的角色。

Tim Simpson的著作重點敘述澳門過去20年來的社會經濟發展狀況,期間澳門曾發展成為世界上最富有的地區之一。另外,他還以澳門作為葡萄牙領土近五個世紀的歷史為背景展開對當代澳門的研究,以及關注其在16世紀全球資本主義萌芽時的關鍵作用,讓讀者了解澳門近來在全球舞台上再崛起是早期經濟職能的延續。

該書主要分析了澳門的全新城市面貌,包括大型綜合度假村和夢幻主題環境,其中兩座建築物更是世界上最大型的。Tim Simpson亦探討了此類環境在中國旅遊業發展中起到的借鏡作用。

Tim Simpson自2001年起在澳門居住和工作,親歷澳門的巨大轉變。在他獨特的視角下,該書從社會理論、城市研究、經濟史等領域揭示澳門博彩資本主義的根源。在研究中國更廣泛的城市化專案、國家經濟改革及消費文化的興起方面提供獨特的觀點。

欲瀏覽官網版可登入以下連結:
https://www.um.edu.mo/zh-hant/news-and-press-releases/presss-release/detail/55706/


UM professor publishes new book about Macao

Tim Simpson, associate professor in the Department of Communication of the University of Macau (UM) Faculty of Social Sciences, has published a new book Betting on Macau: Casino Capitalism and China’s Consumer Revolution with the University of Minnesota Press. The book explores Macao’s recent transformation into the world’s most lucrative site of casino gaming and the city’s formative role in China’s own metamorphosis into the largest consumer society on the planet.

Prof Simpson’s book focuses on the past two decades of Macao’s social and economic development, during which the city became one of the world’s wealthiest territories. However, he locates his study of contemporary Macao within the city’s half a millennium of history as a Portuguese territory, and its crucial role in the emergence of global capitalism in the 16th century. This allows readers to understand Macao’s recent re-emergence on the global stage as a continuation of the city’s early economic function.

Much of the book analyses Macao’s new cityscape of massive integrated megaresorts with fantastical themed environments, including two of the largest buildings in the world. Prof Simpson also explores the pedagogical role of this built environment in the development of China’s tourism industry.

Prof Simpson has lived and worked in Macao since 2001, providing him with a unique perspective on the city’s dramatic changes. Engaging with the fields of social theory, urban studies, and economic history, the book uncovers the roots of Macao’s indigenous mode of gambling capitalism, and in turn provides a distinctive view of China’s broader project of urbanisation, the country’s economic reforms, and the rise of its consumer culture.

To read the news on UM’s official website, please visit the following link:
https://www.um.edu.mo/news-and-press-releases/press-release/detail/55706/