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This book provides a timely contribution to the extant literature from comprehensively and systematically conceptualizing "infodemic" and "post-truth" in the context of COVID-19.
The book is a collection of fifteen introductory essays excerpted from the Annual of Contemporary Art in China, covering the years from 2005 to 2019, showcasing the development and changing landscapes of contemporary art in China.The Annual documents exhibitions, events, creative practices, and critical literature concerning contemporary art in China since 2005. Based on archival documentation and statistics data from these annuals, notable phenomena, events, and discourses from a given year, as well as key works and artists are reviewed in each introduction, with no ideological or market-driven undertone. The author unravels industrial and institutional factors, while also broaching important issues of abstract art, new media art and so on, and probing the historical and socio-cultural context as well. In this regard, the book offers a panorama of contemporary Chinese art and critically engages with the art scene in China, including Hongkong, Taiwan, and among the Chinese diaspora.The title will appeal to scholars, students and general readers interested in contemporary art history, art criticism, contemporary Chinese art, iconography, and contemporary art theory.
This edited volume examines regional differences in social structure in rural China and elaborates the characteristics, reasons and practical implications to policymaking.In contrast to many existing studies, the book spotlights regional disparities that stem from the varied social compositions of villages and their social relations in rural areas of Northern, Central and Southern China. Three types of rural community structures, ranging from the north to the south of China, are identified, including the segmented village comprised of kinship groups with a high degree of atomization, and the united village resting on a patrilineage-based organization. The editor draws on middle-range theory, organically combining a theoretical framework of the regional variations with empirical studies based on years of fieldwork in rural China. This approach is used throughout the book to analyze topics in four aspects: family relations, social interactions, other notable social issues and rural governance.The volume will appeal to scholars and students of sociology and Chinese studies, as well as general readers interested in rural Chinese society.
This book challenges assumptions of Chinese citizenship: that the concept is alien to Chinese culture and that is authoritarian to a degree that citizenship play a limited role. In contrast, China has its unique and rich experience of the emergence, development, rights, obligations, acts, culture, education, and sites of citizenship.
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