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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 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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TITLES
Introduction : privatizing China : powers of the self, socialism from afar / Aihwa Ong and Li Zhang
Private homes, distinct lifestyles : performing a new middle class / Li Zhang
Property rights and homeowner activism in new neighborhoods / Benjamin L. Read
Socialist land masters : the territorial politics of accumulation / You-tien Hsing
Tax tensions : struggles over income and revenue / Bei Li and Steven M. Sheffrin
"Reorganized moralism" : the politics of transnational labor codes / Pun Ngai
Neoliberalism and Hmong/Miao transnational media ventures / Louisa Schein
Consuming medicine and biotechnology in China / Nancy N. Chen
Should I quit? : tobacco, fraught identity, and the risks of governmentality / Matthew Kohrman
Wild consumptions : relocating responsibilities in the time of SARS / Mei Zhan
Post-Mao professionalism : self-enterprise and patriotism / Lisa M. Hoffman
Self-fashioning Shanghainese : dancing across spheres of value / Aihwa Ong
Living buddhas, netizens, and the price of religious freedom / Dan Smyer Yü
Privatizing control : Internet cafés in China / Zhou Yongming
Afterword : thinking outside the Leninist corporate box / Ralph A. Litzinger