Digital infrastructure in rural China acts as a significant temporal intervention, yet its impact on social sustainability remains under-explored. Adopting the “timescape” lens, this study examines the interaction between linear algorithmic time and cyclical agricultural rhythms. Focusing on Qing Village, a hollowed-out settlement in the Wuling Mountains, we employed a mixed-methods approach combining ethnography, time-use surveys, and logistics trace data. The findings depict a transforming rural timescape characterized by specific temporal tensions: (1) digital connectivity tends to permeate the interstices of agricultural labor, blurring the traditional boundaries between work and recovery; (2) the “digital nanny” phenomenon emerges as a temporal trade-off, where caregivers utilize devices to manage labor pressure, modifying the sequence of intergenerational interaction; and (3) logistics systems facilitate a loose re-synchronization of consumption, and villagers further demonstrate behavioral elasticity by leveraging natural interruptions to reclaim social time. We suggest that digital intervention reconfigures the local temporal order. Consequently, achieving genuine social sustainability requires moving beyond coverage metrics to establish a resilient “ecology of social time” that respects diverse rural temporalities.
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Zhang et al. (Sun,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/699e918df5123be5ed04f327 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/su18042149
Lingjun Zhang
Yang Ouyang
Leiting Peng
Sustainability
Wuhan University
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