Strangers in the City

联合创作 · 2023-09-25

Zhang (anthropology, Univ. of California, Davis)has reworked her dissertation into a readable though still scholarly study of China's "floating population," i.e., the one million peasants from Chinese rural areas who have "floated" into urban areas to form a workforce that has changed the dynamics of Chinese society, commerce, and power relations. Arguing that such changes symb...

Zhang (anthropology, Univ. of California, Davis)has reworked her dissertation into a readable though still scholarly study of China's "floating population," i.e., the one million peasants from Chinese rural areas who have "floated" into urban areas to form a workforce that has changed the dynamics of Chinese society, commerce, and power relations. Arguing that such changes symbolize post-Mao China's move toward democracy, Zhang centers her study around the largest migrant community who moved to Beijing from rural Wenzhou, establishing themselves in 48 large compounds. She explores the ways their leaders build power bases by controlling the market space and carefully details the many challenges they face, such as discrimination, crime, and governmental harassment. Background on China's system of household registry and some knowledge about migration within the country are needed to understand this study fully. Most suitable for academic libraries.

Zhang Li(张鹂),美籍华人,人类学家。加州大学戴维斯分校人类学系主任、教授。1998毕业于康奈尔大学人类学系,获得哲学博士学位。1998-1999年在哈佛大学费正清研究中心从事博士后研究。研究方向为城市人类学、人口流动、中产阶级及其消费实践、后社会主义等。除本书 外,还曾出版著作In Search of Paradise: Middle Class Living in a Chinese Metropolis(康奈尔大学出版社,2010年)

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