Search
 
Home| Join Our Mailing List| New Reviews| New Titles
Editor's Choice| Bestsellers| Textbooks| Book Series| Study Guides| E-Catalogues
  ASIAN STUDIES
  Asian Business/ Management
Asian Culture/
Literary Studies/ Literature

Asian Economies
Asian History
Asian Politics/ Society
China Studies
New Titles
December Bestsellers
Editor's Choice
Nobel Lectures
Textbooks
Recent Reviews
Book Series
Related Journals
  • China: An International Journal (CIJ)
  • Asian Case Research Journal (ACRJ)
  • Journal of Enterprising Culture (JEC)
  • Review of Pacific Basin Financial Markets and Policies (RPBFMP)
  • The Singapore Economic Review (SER)
  • Request for related catalogues
     
      PRODUCTS
      Journals
    eBooks
    Journals Archives
    eProceedings
     
      RESOURCES
      Print flyer
  • Full Version
  • Condensed Version
  • Recommend title
    For Librarians
    For Authors
    For Booksellers
    For Translation Rights About Us
    Contact Us
    How to Order News
     
    Bookmark and Share

    THE TRANSITION STUDY OF POSTSOCIALIST CHINA
    An Ethnographic Study of a Model Community

    by Wing-Chung Ho (City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong)

    Table of Contents (57k)
    Preface (1,293k)
    Chapter 1: Encountering a Forgotten People, Experiencing Social Change (2,830k)

    There is no denying that China has experienced, and is still experiencing, radical changes, generally initiated by the vibrant market-driven economy that began in the late 1970s. The question remains, however, of what has happened to those who, just a few decades before, experienced pride and power in being part of the proletariat. How do they make sense of the past and face up to the uncertainties of the future? This book presents an anthropological investigation into their lives and memories in order to understand their situation.

    Presently a working-class neighborhood in Shanghai, Cucumber Lane was in the 1960s a well-known socialist “model community” being transformed from an urban slum in the 1940s. The neighborhood was further recast as a “civilized small community” in the 1990s. Based on oral histories as well as ethnographic observations and pertinent historical materials, this book portrays the ways the Chinese have been making sense of and coping with radical changes during a period punctuated by shifts in political priorities, vicissitudes in ideological orientation, changes in the way they conceive of their relationship with the state and enterprises, the (de-)politicization of social identities, the rise and fall of collectivism, and the explosive vitality of the new market economy.

     
    Contents:
    • Encounting a Forgotten People, Experiencing Social Change
    • The (Un-) Making of a Socialist “Model Community”: Heterogeneous Appropriations of the Past
    • Binding Up the “Loose Sand”: The Rise and Fall of Collectivism
    • Building Up Modernity: The Spatial Representations of State Power
    • Negotiating Subalternity: “Model Proletarians” or “Society People”?
    • Facing Up to the Postsocialist Future: Public Amnesia and Multiple Modenities
    • Conclusion: Experiencing and Ideology that Truncates Time and Space
    • Epilogue: Revisiting Cucumber Lane in 2008
     
    Readership: Academics and general readers interested in the Chinese revolution and contemporary Chinese society.
     
     
    284pp    Pub. date: Jul 2010  
    ISBN:   978-981-4307-62-8
    981-4307-62-9
       US$77 / £53

     


    284pp    Pub. date: Jul 2010  
    ISBN:   978-981-4307-63-5(ebook)
    981-4307-63-7(ebook)
       US$100

     


     

    Imperial College Press  |  Global Publishing  |  Asia-Pacific Biotech News  |  Innovation Magazine
    Labcreations Co  |  Meeting Matters  |  National Academies Press

    Copyright © 2012 World Scientific Publishing Co. All rights reserved.
    Updated on 10 February 2012