As critical voices question the quality, authenticity, and value of people, goods, and words in post-Mao China, accusations of emptiness render things open to new investments of meaning, substance, and value. Exploring the production of lack and desire through fine-grained ethnography, this volume examines how diagnoses of emptiness operate in a range of very different domains in contemporary China: In the ostensibly meritocratic exam system and the rhetoric of officials, in underground churches, housing bubbles, and nationalist fantasies, in bodies possessed by spirits and evaluations of jade, there is a pervasive concern with states of lack and emptiness and the contributions suggest that this play of emptiness and fullness is crucial to ongoing constructions of quality, value, and subjectivity in China.
Зміст
List of Illustrations
Introduction
Mikkel Bunkenborg and Susanne Bregnbæk
Chapter 1. China’s Examination Fever and the Fabrication of Fairness: “My Generation was Raised on Poison Milk”
Zachary M. Howlett
Chapter 2. Guanhua! Beijing Students, Authoritative Discourse, and the Ritual Production of Political Compliance
Anders Sybrandt Hansen
Chapter 3. Interior Spaces of Hope: Inner Selves, Intersubjectivity, and Agency among Chinese Christians in Beijing
Susanne Bregnbæk
Chapter 4. The Tower and The Tower: Excess and Vacancy in China’s Ghost Cities
Michael Alexander Ulfstjerne
Chapter 5. The Manchu in the Mirror: The Emptiness of Identity and the Fullness of Conspiracy Theory
Kevin Carrico
Chapter 6. Empty Diseases and Horror Vacui in Rural Hebei
Mikkel Bunkenborg
Chapter 7. The Potentials of Feicui: Indeterminacy and Determination in Human-Jade Interactions in South-West China
Henrik Kloppenborg Møller
Index
Про автора
Mikkel Bunkenborg is an associate professor in China Studies at the Department of Cross-Cultural and Regional Studies, University of Copenhagen.