Li Zhang is a professor of anthropology at the University of California-Davis and a 2008 Guggenheim fellow. Her research concerns the cultural, spatial, and psychological repercussions of market reforms and postsocialist transformations in China. Her first book, Strangers in the City: Reconfigurations of Space, Power, and Social Networks within China's Floating Population (Stanford 2001), traces the reconfigurations of space, power, and social networks within China's "floating population" under late socialism and globalization. Her recently published book, In Search of Paradise: Middle Class Living in a Chinese Metropolis (Cornell 2010), examines how the rise of private home ownership reshapes class-specific subjects, urban space, and postsocialist governing. She has also co-edited a volume with Aihwa Ong, Privatizing China, Socialism from Afar (Cornell), which explores how technologies of privatization and neoliberalism articulate with diverse areas of life and politics in China. Her current new research project explores what she calls the "inner revolution" brought by an emerging psychological counseling movement in the cities and how it reshapes Chinese people's understandings of selfhood, emotions, happiness, and well-being in the midst of rapid social change.
发表于2024-12-22
Privatizing China 2024 pdf epub mobi 电子书
图书标签: 人类学 海外中国研究 中国 Aihwa_Ong 新自由主义 日常生活 anthropology 张鹂
Everyday 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 cafés 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.
导论不错。借用福柯governmentality的框架,把“how one should live”这个问题放在“新自由主义”的语境下去考察,探究state在转型过程中如何动员了“老百姓”的自我观念。可以和阎云翔之前的几本书结合着看。
评分Nacy Chen写的什么鬼,太失望了,搞点关于医药和健康的信息(注意是信息!而不是田野材料),加上点儿理论bare life云云,草就这一篇是何苦呢。Ong的那篇倒是非常不错,可读性比前者不知道高到哪里去了
评分theoretical framework的推导正是我想要的,打破了西方批判新自由主义的陈词滥调和局限性
评分导论不错。借用福柯governmentality的框架,把“how one should live”这个问题放在“新自由主义”的语境下去考察,探究state在转型过程中如何动员了“老百姓”的自我观念。可以和阎云翔之前的几本书结合着看。
评分感觉所有用governmentality框架来研究中国的学者,写作都有点post hoc。就是从纷杂的现实中抽出几个片段——人在某一个领域里有了选择的自由,然后就说这是一种新的治理技术,国家通过让人充分有自由而实现了远程管理。而对我来说,与其用这样的概念来描述中国以区别于所谓西方线性发展观,还不如描述一下治理技术进步的缓慢蹒跚以及遇到的种种阻碍来得更有趣一些。
Privatizing China 2024 pdf epub mobi 电子书