97 research outputs found
Research Fellows Conference Panel on Subordinate Actors and Their Marginalization in Social Theory
Also CSST Working Paper #28.http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/51159/1/391.pd
Making Sense of Institutional Change in China: The Cultural Dimension of Economic Growth and Modernization
Putting Global Capitalism in Its Place
This exceedingly interesting paper takes as its starting
point J. K. Gibson-Graham’s exhortation to find new theoretical
languages to explain capitalism’s supposed triumph
without reproducing the self-justificatory narratives
of its inevitability and global dominance. Yang
crafts such a theoretical language, using tools derived
from Bataille, Baudrillard, and Bakhtin and through an
insightful and nuanced analysis of apparently “irrational”
ritual expenditures in Wenzhou, a region often
touted in the press as a success story of capitalism and
free markets in the “new China.” Specifically, Yang develops
two models. One is a model of ritual expenditure
that attends to the sacralization of the putatively economic.
It is meant to address the shortcomings of other
models of peasant economies, the author arguing that
peasant economies are never, strictly speaking, merely
economic. The other is a model of economic hybridity
that directly answers Gibson-Graham’s call for a critique
of global capitalism as all-conquering and capitalist economic
development as a one-way street. This model is
meant to address the shortcomings of the articulation of-
modes-of-production models of an earlier moment in
economic anthropology
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Chinese Religiosities: Afflictions of Modernity and State Formation
The long twentieth century in China and Taiwan has seen both a dramatic process of state-driven secularization and modernization and a vigorous revival of contemporary religious life. Chinese Religiosities explores the often vexed relationship between the modern Chinese state and religious practice. The essays in this comprehensive, multidisciplinary collection cover a wide range of traditions, including Buddhism, Daoism, Islam, Confucianism, Protestantism, Falungong, popular religion, and redemptive societies
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Goddess across the Taiwan Strait: Matrifocal Ritual Space, Nation-State, and Satellite Television Footprints
This essay examines complex interactions among the nation-state, popular religion, media capitalism, and gendered territorialization as these are inflected across the Taiwan Strait. Relations across the strait have been fraught with political tension and military preparations over the question of whether taiwan is part of China or an independent state. Since the 1999 presidential elections in Taiwan, the new government there has been more vociferous about Taiwan independence, and mainland China's Communist Party has responded with more vigorous claims on Taiwan, including the launching of a warning missile over the island. Under these conditions, it is all the more remarkable that in recent years there has been an increasing number of religious pilgrimages and exchanges across the strait, and that, in 2000, one such pilgrimage by Taiwanese worshippers of the maritime goddess Mazu to her natal home in Fujian Province was broadcast live from China back to Taiwan via satellite television
Spatial Struggles: Postcolonial Complex, State Disenchantment, and Popular Reappropriation of Space in Rural Southeast China
Chinese Religiosities: Afflictions of Modernity and State Formation
The long twentieth century in China and Taiwan has seen both a dramatic process of state-driven secularization and modernization and a vigorous revival of contemporary religious life. Chinese Religiosities explores the often vexed relationship between the modern Chinese state and religious practice. The essays in this comprehensive, multidisciplinary collection cover a wide range of traditions, including Buddhism, Daoism, Islam, Confucianism, Protestantism, Falungong, popular religion, and redemptive societies
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