Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Nancy N. Chen, University of California at Santa Cruz Lisa M. Hoffman, University of Washington, Tacoma You-tien Hsing, University of California, Berkeley Matthew Kohrman, Stanford University Bei Li, University of California, Davis Ralph A. Litzinger, Duke University Pun Ngai, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology Aihwa Ong, University of California, Berkeley Benjamin L. Read, University of Iowa Louisa Schein, Rutgers University Steven M. Sheffrin, University of California, Davis Dan Smyer Yue, CIEE Study Center at Central University of Nationalities in Beijing, China Mei Zhan, University of California, Irvine Li Zhang, University of California, Davis Zhou Yongming, University of Wisconsin-MadisonEveryday life in China is increasingly shaped by a novel mix of neoliberal and socialist elements, of individual choices and state objectives. This combination of self-determination and socialism from afar has incited profound changes in the ways individuals think and act in different spheres of society. Covering a vast range of daily life--from homeowner organizations and the users of Internet cafes to self-directed professionals and informed consumers--the essays in Privatizing China create a compelling picture of the burgeoning awareness of self-governing within the postsocialist context. The introduction by Aihwa Ong and Li Zhang presents assemblage as a concept for studying China as a unique postsocialist society created through interactions with global forms. The authors conduct their ethnographic fieldwork in a spectrum of domains--family, community, real estate, business, taxation, politics, labor, health, professions, religion, and consumption--that are infiltrated by new techniques of the self and yet also regulated by broader socialist norms. Privatizing China gives readers a grounded, fine-grained intimacy with the variety and complexity of everyday conduct in China's turbulent transformation.
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