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Journal/Serial
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Chicago, Ill. : University of Chicago Press | Canberra : Centre ; Nr. 34.1995 -
UID:
gbv_188855610
ISSN: 1324-9347
Additional Edition: ISSN 1835-8535
Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Online-Ausg. The China journal Chicago, Ill. : Univ. of Chicago Press, 1995 ISSN 1835-8535
Former: Vorg. The Australian journal of Chinese affairs
Language: English
Keywords: China ; Zeitschrift ; China ; Politik ; Zeitschrift ; Sinologie ; Zeitschrift ; Zeitschrift
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Associated Volumes
  • 2
    UID:
    gbv_1640630627
    ISSN: 1324-9347
    Content: Particularly since the mid-1990s, Chinese journals, educational guides, ethics and citizenship handbooks, newspaper articles, advertising billboards and websites have carried an infinite array of commentaries and images relating to the CCP’s formulation of what it means to be “civilized”. This article explains the appropriation of “civilization” (wenming) by China’s post-Mao political élite, the persistence of the term, and its evolution into a key reform-era ideological construct. The binary construct of spiritual (jingshen) and material (wuzhi) civilization has developed from a contested political tool deployed by Deng Xiaoping in the early years of opening and reform to an established ideological doctrine. Jiang Zemin’s presidency saw the addition of “political civilization”, and more recent talk of a “social civilization” suggests the potential for further mutations. “Civilization” (and the body of theory that now surrounds it) has become an important genetic thread used by third and fourth generation technocrats to create an ideological lineage for their distinct political platforms and in doing so to maintain - or be seen to be maintaining - the moral legitimacy of the Party. (China J/GIGA)
    In: The China journal, Chicago, Ill. : University of Chicago Press, 1995, (2008), 60, Seite 83-110, 1324-9347
    In: year:2008
    In: number:60
    In: pages:83-110
    Language: English
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  • 3
    UID:
    gbv_1641856211
    ISSN: 1324-9347
    Content: By describing and analyzing several cases of youth suicide and attempted suicide in a rural county of North China, I enquire into "gambling for qi" (du qi), a popular phrase to explain the cause of suicide in the local society. "Gambling for qi" is aimed to win dignity (qi) by behaving in an extreme way without deliberating about the result. Young people often commit suicide by gambling for when engaged in conflicts in family politics, which are often trivial quarrels. The fact that they frequently gamble for qi in such trivial conflicts shows that there are many problems in the family in post-1949 China. On the one hand, young people are more independent and autonomous in the family; on the other hand, this plunges them into complex and confusing personal dilemmas in the games of power played out within the family. (China J/DÜI)
    In: The China journal, Chicago, Ill. : University of Chicago Press, 1995, (2005), 54, Seite 7-54, 1324-9347
    In: year:2005
    In: number:54
    In: pages:7-54
    Language: English
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  • 4
    UID:
    gbv_1639626557
    ISSN: 1324-9347
    Content: The contemporary focus on cultivating citizens with creative abilities and a sense of enterprise links national socialist modernity to the mundane emotion-work of parents, especially mothers. In the context of China's suzhi jiaoyu reforms, popular experts encourage mothers to restrain excessive emotion, so as to protect a child's "heart spirit" - the putative source of transformative human qualities. This article describes the "emotion work" that urban mothers conduct in a continual effort to become a better parent. It argues that the experience of anger and ambivalence takes form at the intersections between the regulatory discourse of popular advice, the gendering of parental responsibilities, and a strong desire to raise a competitive student who will survive difficult odds. At this juncture, urban mothers live out and negotiate contradictory commitments. While popular experts in China see excessive emotion as problematic, this article draws on theories of human emotion and virtue ethics to argue that it is in and through the experience of emotion that mothers constitute themselves as ethical subjects. Their anger and ambivalence indicates a rich perception of the complexities that shape parenting in reform era China. The emotion is, as anthropologist Richard Shweder puts it, "the whole story". (China J/GIGA)
    In: The China journal, Chicago, Ill. : University of Chicago Press, 1995, (2011), 65, Seite 77-100, 1324-9347
    In: year:2011
    In: number:65
    In: pages:77-100
    Language: English
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  • 5
    UID:
    gbv_164470353X
    Format: Lit.Hinw.
    ISSN: 1324-9347
    Content: Kontrolle und Überwachung durch den Parteistaat begrenzen den institutionellen Rahmen für politisch tätige, nichtstaatliche Organisationen in der VR China. Am Beispiel der Chen-Wang-Gruppe untersucht der Autor, wie die seit den 80er Jahren entstandenen sozio-politischen Institutionen von Intellektuellen genutzt werden, um ihre politische Partizipation und ihren Einfluß öffentlich durchzusetzen. Durch Umstrukturierung der Beziehung zwischen Staat und Intellektuellen, indem Möglichkeiten der politischen Teilhabe der intellektuellen Elite institutionalisiert werden, wollte die Cheng-Wang-Gruppe ihre politische Etablierung erreichen. Die Entwicklungsgeschichte der Chen-Wang-Gruppe im Aufbau von nichtstaatlichen Organisationen zeigt den weiterhin bestehenden Einfluß von traditioneller politischer Kultur in China. Patronagebeziehungen, persönliche Kontakte sowie "backstage supporter" sind grundlegend für politische Etablierung in der VR China. (FUB/APCh-Str)
    In: The China journal, Chicago, Ill. : University of Chicago Press, 1995, (1998), 39, Seite 39-58, 1324-9347
    In: year:1998
    In: number:39
    In: pages:39-58
    Language: English
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  • 6
    UID:
    gbv_1644703769
    Format: Lit.Hinw.
    ISSN: 1324-9347
    Content: Enthält Rezensionen u.a. von: Gittings, John: Real China: from cannibalism to karaoke. - London : Simon and Schuster, 1996
    Content: Die von Hooper vorgestellten Bücher (J. Gittings: Real China, London 1996; J. Miles: The Legacy of Tiananmen, 1997; J. Wong: Red China Blues, Toronto 1996; Cheng Li: Rediscovering China, Lanham, 1997) versuchen, ein Bild des "realen Chinas" darzustellen, indem die Autoren die Entwicklungen und Ereignisse, basierend auf ihren langjährigen Erfahrungen in und mit China, interpretieren. Bis auf Li, der die "Wunder" des Wirtschaftsbooms preist, präsentieren die anderen drei Autoren ein eher negatives Bild. Wong schildert ihre Desillusion über den Maoismus und die KPCh, besonders nach dem Tiananmen-Massaker, während Gittings die zukünftigen Probleme in der Unterentwicklung und Vernachlässigung der ländlichen Region sieht. Im Gegensatz zu Li ist Miles der Überzeugung, daß dem Wirtschaftsboom politische und soziale Spannungen folgen werden. (FUB/APCh-Str)
    In: The China journal, Chicago, Ill. : University of Chicago Press, 1995, (1998), 39, Seite 83-91, 1324-9347
    In: year:1998
    In: number:39
    In: pages:83-91
    Language: English
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  • 7
    UID:
    gbv_1639856064
    ISSN: 1324-9347
    Content: The modern cityscapes of Shanghai and Beijing, which today seem to crystallize Chinese dreams of modernity and global status, are underpinned by a construction industry steeped in a culture of violence. This culture arises from the political economy of the industry and from the politics of labor resistance among migrant construction workers. The rapid development of the industry has enabled a highly exploitative labor subcontracting system to emerge, characterized both by the rapid commodification of labor through non-industrial social relations organized through a quasi-labor market in the rural villages and by the expropriation of labor during the production process of the construction sector in urban areas. These two processes shape a labor subcontracting system that results in a never-ending process of wage arrears and the struggle of construction workers to pursue delayed wages in various ways, often involving violent collective action
    In: The China journal, Chicago, Ill. : University of Chicago Press, 1995, (2010), 64, Seite 143-158, 1324-9347
    In: year:2010
    In: number:64
    In: pages:143-158
    Language: English
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  • 8
    UID:
    gbv_1639406433
    ISSN: 1324-9347
    Content: As the gains from agricultural liberalization diminish, China's policy-makers are looking for new ways to generate sustained agricultural and rural development. One major attempt to do so has been through a multi-faceted agricultural modernization program, in which the state will play a major role. This paper examines the role of the state in China's agricultural modernization program and provides recommendations on how this role can be enhanced. It does so through a case study of China's fine wool marketing sector, which comprises a diverse cast of specialized actors stretching from the west to the east of China, linked through a tapestry of policies, services and institutions. The detailed, micro-level and nuanced analysis leads to a set of specific recommendations on how these policy, service and institutional settings can be strengthened, but highlights that these measures must be underpinned by increased state capacity to deliver public good services. (China J/GIGA)
    In: The China journal, Chicago, Ill. : University of Chicago Press, 1995, (2011), 66, Seite 119-144, 1324-9347
    In: year:2011
    In: number:66
    In: pages:119-144
    Language: English
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  • 9
    UID:
    gbv_1644398605
    Format: Tab., Lit.Hinw.
    ISSN: 1324-9347
    Content: Die Autoren vergleichen Guangzhou (Canton) und Ho Chi Minh Stadt (Saigon) in ihrer Bedeutung und ihrem Einfluß auf die nationale wirtschaftliche Reformpolitik. Aufgrund der relativen Größe von Vietnam mit Ho Chi Minh Stadt als einziger Industriemetropole, beeinflußt diese Stadt die gesamtwirtschaftliche Produktion des Landes in einem höheren Maße als Guangzhou in der VR China. Aus diesem Grund mußte die vietnamesische Regierung gezwungenermaßen auf wachstumsorientierte Reformbewegungen reagieren und eine dementsprechend angepaßte Wirtschaftspolitik konzipieren. Im Gegensatz dazu wurde von der chinesischen Zentralregierung gemeinsam mit der Regionalregierung ein wirtschaftliches Reformprogramm für Guangzhou erarbeitet mit dem Ziel, das Modell bei erfolgreicher Durchführung auf andere Regionen zu übertragen. (FUB/APCh-Str)
    In: The China journal, Chicago, Ill. : University of Chicago Press, 1995, (1998), 40, Seite 95-119, 1324-9347
    In: year:1998
    In: number:40
    In: pages:95-119
    Language: English
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  • 10
    UID:
    gbv_1644118211
    ISSN: 1324-9347
    In: The China journal, Chicago, Ill. : University of Chicago Press, 1995, (1999), 42, Seite 1-20, 1324-9347
    In: year:1999
    In: number:42
    In: pages:1-20
    Language: English
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