The Consumer Revolution in Urban China

封面
Deborah Davis
University of California Press, 2000年1月20日 - 366 頁
After decades of egalitarian, restricted consumption, residents of China's cities are surrounded by a level of material comfort and commercial hype unimaginable just ten years ago. In this first in-depth treatment of the consumer revolution in China, fourteen leading scholars of Chinese culture and society explore the interpersonal consequences of rapid commercialization.

In the early 1980s, Beijing's communist leadership advocated decollectivization, foreign trade, and private entrepreneurship to jump-start a stagnant economy, while explicitly rejecting any notion that economic reforms would promote political change. However, by the early 1990s the reforms in the marketplace not only produced double-digit growth but also enabled ordinary citizens to nurture dreams and social networks that challenged official discourse and conventions through millions of daily commercial transactions. Using participant observation, contributors to this book describe and analyze a wide range of these changing consumer practices: luxury housing, white wedding gowns, greeting cards, McDonald's, discos, premium cigarettes, bowling, and more.

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內容

Introduction A Revolution in Consumption
1
THE CONSUMER REVOLUTION AND THE DOMESTIC SPHERE
23
Inventing Oasis Luxury Housing Advertisements and Reconfiguring Domestic Space in Shanghai
25
Commercializing Childhood Parental Purchases for Shanghais Only Child
54
Whats in a Dress? Brides in the Hui Quarter of Xian
80
The Revitalization of the Marketplace Food Markets of Nanjing
107
To Be Relatively Comfortable in an Egalitarian Society
124
SOCIABILITY IN A MORE COMMODIFIED SOCIETY
143
Of Hamburger and Social Space Consuming McDonalds in Beijing
201
Dancing through the Market Transition Disco and Dance Hall Sociability in Shanghai
226
Cultivating Friendship through Bowling in Shenzhen
250
Cigarettes and Domination in Chinese Business Networks Institutional Change during the Market Transition
268
Public Monuments and Private Pleasures in the Parks of Nanjing A Tango in the Ruins of the Ming Emperors Palace
287
Epilogue The Second Liberation
312
CONTRIBUTORS
321
BIBLIOGRAPHY
323

HearttoHeart PhonetoPhone Family Values Sexuality and the Politics of Shanghais Advice Hotlines
145
Greeting Cards in China Mixed Language of Connections and Affections
171

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關於作者 (2000)

Deborah S. Davis, Professor of Sociology at Yale University, is the author of Long Lives: Chinese Elderly and the Communist Revolution (1991) and coeditor of Chinese Society on the Eve of Tiananmen (1990), Chinese Families in the Post-Mao Era (California, 1993), and Urban Spaces in Contemporary China: The Potential for Autonomy and Community in Post-Mao China (1995).

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