First offered as an ExEAS course at Barnard College in Spring 2004 and Spring 2005
It is not an exaggeration to say that Chinese people have been forced time and again to change the course of their lives by the reforms that began in the late 1970s. Along with economic prosperity the reforms have brought about dramatic structural reorganization and rapid social changes. This course will examine contemporary Chinese society and its unique development path from a sociological perspective, with particular attention to the social and cultural changes that have come about as a result of economic reforms. We will analyze how relations between the state and society and between organizations and individuals have changed, how these changes affect people’s lives, social relations and value systems, and how people’s different responses to structural reorganization have altered the trajectory of reforms. We will examine interactions among politics, institutions, ideology, and collective actions. By examining the case of China, students are expected to gain a solid grasp not only of contemporary China, but also of social development in general.
Fei, Xiaotong. 1992 [1947]. From the Soil: The Foundations of Chinese Society. University of California Press.
Zhang, Li. 2001. Strangers in the City. Stanford University Press.
Wank, David. 1999. Commodifying Communism. Cambridge University Press.
Zhao, Dingxin. 2001. The Power of Tiananmen. University of Chicago Press.
Farrer, James. 2002. Opening Up: Youth Sex Culture and Market Reform in Shanghai. University of Chicago Press.
A course reading pack.
The books are available in Labyrinth Books. Please purchase the coursepack at Broadway Copy Center: 3062 Broadway (at 121 St.) Tel: 212-864-6501 (call beforehand). All reading materials are on reserve in Barnard and East Asian Libraries.
Course Requirements:
- Attendance and class participation (10%)
- Weekly web memo addressing assigned readings (15%)
- Take-home mid-term exam. Essay topics for the exam will be distributed in class two weeks prior to the due date. In the essays, you will be asked to address the assigned topics based on required readings and class discussions. Essays should be no longer than 8 pages. (20%)
- Research paper (12-14 pages). A one-page proposal with bibliography must be submitted first. (30%)
- In-class cumulative final exam (25%)
Readings marked with an asterisk (*) are in the course pack.
Section I: Introduction: Defining Contemporary China
WEEK ONE
January 18 : Introduction
January 20 : Sociological Study of China
READINGS:
Hamilton, Gary and Wang, Zheng. 1992. “Introduction: Fei Xiaotong and the Beginnings of a Chinese Sociology,” pp. 1-34 in From the Soil.
Fei, Xiaotong. Chapter 1 pp. 37-44
WEEK TWO
January 25 : Social Life under Socialism
Documentary Film: Mao Years (2 hours) (Screening will be scheduled on Jan. 24. Time: TBA)
Recommended: Fairbank, John King. 1992. China: A New History, pp. 343-405.
January 27 : Sociological Approaches to Social Change and Development
READING:
* Peet, Richard. 1999. Chapter 3 & 4, pp. 65-122 in Theories of Development.
Section II: Structural Changes and Reorganization
WEEK THREE
February 1 : On the Eve of Reform: Economy, State and Society
READINGS:
* Nolan, Peter and Robert F. Ash. 1996. ” China’s Economy on the Eve of Reform,” pp. 18-36 in Andrew Walder (ed.) China‘s Transitional Economy.
* Shue, Vivienne. 1994. “State Power and Social Organization in China,” pp. 65-88 in Migdal, Kohli, and Shue (ed.) State Power and Social Force.
February 3 : The Initial Stage of the Reforms: Changing Social Contracts
READING:
* Naughton, Barry. 1996. Chapter 3 & 4, pp.97-169 in Growing Out of the Plan.
WEEK FOUR
February 8 : From “Iron Rice Bowl” to “China Rice Bowl”
READING:
* Lee, Ching Kwan. 1999. “From Organized Dependence to Disorganized Despotism: Changing Labor Relations in Chinese Factories,” pp. 44-71 in The China Quarterly 157.
See Documentary Film: China in the Red (2 hours) (Screening will be scheduled on Feb. 7; time: TBA)
February 10 : From Public to Private Ownership
READINGS:
* Gold, Thomas. 1990. “Urban Private Business and Social Change,” pp. 157-178 in Davis and Vogel (ed.) Chinese Society on the Eve of Tiananmen.
* Parris, Kristen. 1999. “The Rise of Private Business Interests,” pp. 262-282 in Goldman and MacFarquhar (ed.) The Paradox of China’s Post-Mao Reforms.
WEEK FIVE
February 15 : From Countryside to Cities (I)
READING:
Zhang, Li. 2001. Chapter 1-3 in Strangers in the City.
February 17 : From Countryside to Cities (II)
READING:
Zhang, Li. Chapter 4, 7-8 in Strangers in the City.
WEEK SIX
February 22 : From Backdoor to Front Door?
READING:
Wank, David. 1999. Chapter 3-6 in Commodifying Communism
February 24 : From Comradeship to Personal Network
READINGS:
Fei, Xiaotong. Chapter 4 & 5 in From the Soil.
* Kipnis, Andrew. 2002. “Practices of Guanxi Production and Practices of Ganqing Avoidance,” pp.21-34 in Gold, Guthrie and Wank (ed.) Social Connections in China.
One-page paper proposal due
Take-home mid-term essay questions distributed
Section III: Social Conflicts and Unrest
WEEK SEVEN
March 1 : 1989: Tiananmen (I): Background
READING:
Zhao, Dingxin. 2001. Chapter 1-3, 5 in The Power of Tiananmen.
March 3 : 1989: Tiananmen (II): Development
READING:
Zhao, Dingxin. Chapter 6-7.
WEEK EIGHT
March 8 : 1989: Tiananmen (III): State and Society
READING:
Zhao, Dingxin. Chapter 9-10.
Mid-term essay due
Spring Break
WEEK NINE
March 22 : Workers’ Unrest: the Marginalized
READING:
* Lee, Ching Kwan. 2002. “From the Spector of Mao to the Spirit of the Law: Labor Insurgency in China,” pp. 189-228 in Theory and Society 31.
March 24 : Women’s Unemployment and Reemployment
READINGS:
* Wang, Zheng. 2000. “Gender, Employment and Women’s Resistance,” pp. 62-82 in Perry and Selden (ed.) Chinese Society: Change, Conflict and Resistance.
* Li, Xiaojiang. 1994. “Economic Reform and Awakening of Chinese Women’s Collective Consciousness,” pp. 360-384 in Christina Gilmartin et al (ed.) Engendering China: Women, Culture and the State.
WEEK TEN
March 29 : Falun Gong: An Ideological Void?
READINGS:
* Chan, Cheris. 2004. “The Falun Gong in China: A Sociological Perspective,” pp. 665-683. The China Quarterly 179.
* Tong, James. 2002. “An Organizational Analysis of Falun Gong: Structure, Communications, Financing,” pp. 636-660 in The China Quarterly 171.
March 31 : Public Space: Interaction, Negotiation and Reconstruction
READINGS:
* Li, Lianjiang and Kevin J. O’Brien. 1999. “The Struggle over Village Elections,” pp. 129-144 in The Paradox of China’s Post Mao Reforms.
* Efird, Robert. 2001. “Rock in a Hard Place: Music and the Market in Nineties Beijing,” pp. 67-86 in Chan et al (ed.) Urban China.
WEEK ELEVEN
April 5 : Who is Richer and Who is Poorer: Changing Patterns of Inequality
READINGS:
* Luigi Tomba. 2004. “Creating an Urban Middle Class: Social Engineering in Beijing,” pp. 1-26 in The China Journal 51,
* Dickson, Bruce J. 2004. “The Politics of Co-optation,” pp.89-115 in Red Capitalists in China.
April 7 : Screening: Blind Shaft (90 minutes)
Section IV: Ideological Shift and Dilemmas
WEEK TWELVE
April 12 : Changing Values and Norms (I)
READING:
Farrer, James. Chapter 1-3 in Opening Up.
April 14 : Changing Values and Norms (II)
READING:
Farrer, James. Chapter 4-6, 9.
WEEK THIRTEEN
April 19 : Shopping Frenzy: the Formation of Consumer Culture
READINGS:
* Fraser, David. 2000. “Inventing Oasis: Luxury Housing Advertisements and Reconfiguring Domestic Space in Shanghai,” pp. 25-53 in Deborah Davis (ed.) The Consumer Revolution in Urban China.
* Yan, Yunxiang. 2000. “Of Hamburger and Social Space: Consuming McDonald’s in Beijing,” pp. 201-225 in The Consumer Revolution in Urban China.
April 21 : Idelogical Shift: Nationalism
READINGS:
* Zheng, Yongnian. 1999. “Identity Crisis, the ‘New Left’ and Anti-Westernization,” pp. 46-66 in Discovering Chinese Nationalism in China.
* Xiao, Zhiwei. 2002. “Nationalism in Chinese Popular Culture: A Case Study,” pp. 41-54 in Wei and Liu (ed.) Exploring Nationalisms of China: Themes and Conflicts.
WEEK FOURTEEN
April 26 : Modernity Discourse
READINGS:
* Yan, Hairong. 2003. “Spectralization of the Rural: Reinterpreting the Labor Mobility of Rural Women in Post-Mao China,” pp. 1-19 in American Ethonologist 30 (4).
* Ong, Aihwa. 1997. “Chinese Modernities: Narratives of Nation and of Capitalism,” pp. 171-202 in Aihwa Ong et al (ed.) Ungrounded Empire: The Cultural Politics of Modern Chinese Transnationalism.
April 28 : Summary
Research paper due