Select Your Preferred Language

Please choose your language to continue.

Tier-2 influencers redefining Cultural Capital in Digital India | Current Affairs | Vision IAS
Monthly Magazine Logo

Table of Content

Tier-2 influencers redefining Cultural Capital in Digital India

Posted 22 Jul 2025

Updated 25 Jul 2025

3 min read

Why in the News?

Recent emergence of Tier-2 and Tier-3 digital influencers – content creators from smaller towns and regional cities – have had profound impact on the dynamics of digital influence and cultural capital in India.

What is Cultural Capital?

  • Cultural capital refers to non-economic assets like education, language, and cultural knowledge that confer social mobility. (Pierre Bourdieu)
  • Traditional Cultural Capital in India
    • Metro dominance: Cities like Delhi and Mumbai shaped cultural trends in media, fashion, and entertainment.
    • Language hierarchy: English and upper-caste dialects dominated intellectual and aesthetic spaces.
    • Elite institutions: Cultural validation stemmed from associations with institutions like Film and Television Institute of India (FTII), NSD, Doordarshan, and elite universities.

Rise of Tier-2 Influencers

  • It includes Creators from cities like Jaipur, Patna, Surat, Guwahati with large social media following but rooted in regional identity.
  • Platform access: social media (YouTube, Instagram, etc.) democratized content creation.

How Tier-2 Influencers Redefine Cultural Capital

  • Decentralization of Taste and Influence
    • Previously urban-centric symbols of sophistication are now complemented by rural/regional symbols.
    • E.g., Village-based creators like Kiran Dembla creating mass trends.
  • Vernacular as Cultural Power
    • More than 50% of urban internet users prefer consuming content in regional language. (IAMAI)
    • Platforms like ShareChat (Bharat-first app) boast 180M+ monthly users across 15 languages.
    • Content in Bhojpuri, Haryanvi, and Marathi garners millions of views.
  • Revival of Folk and Local Traditions
    • Tier-2 influencers integrate folk music, traditional cuisine, and regional rituals into digital content.
    • E.g., Rajasthan's Manganiyar music promoted through Instagram Reels.
    • YouTube channels like Village Cooking Channel (Tamil Nadu) have 20M+ subscribers.
  • Democratisation of Aspiration
    • Influencers like Saurav Joshi featuring his simple life, family, and relatable activities, redefines success as authenticity, not sophistication.
    • Local heroes → National icons: Many Tier-2 influencers inspire youth to create content in native accents.
  • Platform for Subaltern Voices
    • Creators from marginalized communities (Dalit, tribal, OBC) find space to articulate identity and lived experience.
    • E.g., Khabar Lahariya, a grassroots rural digital newsroom, is run entirely by Dalit women.

Implications for Indian Society

  • Cultural Democratization: Legitimizes diverse aesthetics, customs, and practices once considered 'non-mainstream'.
  • Economic Empowerment: ~80% of creators on ShareChat and Moj are from Tier 2 and Tier 3 cities utilizing new monetisation models such as microtransactions, to drive the majority of creator earnings.
  • Changing Political Landscape: Tier-2 influencers become digital opinion-makers in elections and policy discourse; political parties use them to mobilize regional youth on issues like jobs, caste, and local pride, etc.
  • Bridging the Urban-Rural Divide Creates a sense of shared national identity that accommodates local pride; challenges stereotypes of rural India as regressive or culturally inferior.

Challenges and Ethical Concerns

  • Digital Divide: Rural internet penetration still lags behind urban India; quality content from lower-income creators is limited by access to devices and training.
  • Algorithmic Bias: Social media algorithms prioritize clickbait or sensational content; big businesses still favour polished metro creators for brand partnerships.
  • Stereotyping and Tokenism: Rural culture sometimes showcased as "exotic" rather than authentically represented; Brands may co-opt regional identity without genuine engagement, etc.
  • Commodification of Culture: Local rituals or practices often oversimplified for virality, risking distortion.

Conclusion

As Digital India grows, by making vernacular visible, regional relevant, and subaltern powerful, Tier-2 influencers herald a more inclusive and democratic cultural discourse, valuing authenticity over elitism and diversity over uniformity.

  • Tags :
  • Cultural Capital
  • Democratisation of Aspiration
  • Commodification of Culture
Download Current Article
Subscribe for Premium Features