Introduction: crises of care in China today

Abstract

The introduction presents an overview of crises of care in China today, specifically as they affect the fields of kinship, health, and government. To study care ethnographically, we distinguish between the attentive and active dimensions of care: what people care about, and how they care for others. Acts of care always relate to larger concerns and general values, but they scale up in different ways. The imbalances that emerge are central to the politics of care which our contributors describe. Care as attentive co-growth engages different values, remakes inequality, and nourishes political life. The contributors use the same framework of attention, action, and politics to investigate crucial issues in Chinese society, including family, health, environment, ritual and animals. In all these fields care provides a privileged vantage point to understand social and moral change in China today

    Similar works