Desiring China: Experiments in Neoliberalism, Sexuality, and Public Culture

Desiring China: Experiments in Neoliberalism, Sexuality, and Public Culture

Desiring China: Experiments in Neoliberalism, Sexuality, and Public Culture

Desiring China: Experiments in Neoliberalism, Sexuality, and Public Culture

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Overview

Through window displays, newspapers, soap operas, gay bars, and other public culture venues, Chinese citizens are negotiating what it means to be cosmopolitan citizens of the world, with appropriate needs, aspirations, and longings. Lisa Rofel argues that the creation of such “desiring subjects” is at the core of China’s contingent, piece-by-piece reconfiguration of its relationship to a post-socialist world. In a study at once ethnographic, historical, and theoretical, she contends that neoliberal subjectivities are created through the production of various desires—material, sexual, and affective—and that it is largely through their engagements with public culture that people in China are imagining and practicing appropriate desires for the post-Mao era.

Drawing on her research over the past two decades among urban residents and rural migrants in Hangzhou and Beijing, Rofel analyzes the meanings that individuals attach to various public cultural phenomena and what their interpretations say about their understandings of post-socialist China and their roles within it. She locates the first broad-based public debate about post-Mao social changes in the passionate dialogues about the popular 1991 television soap opera Yearnings. She describes how the emergence of gay identities and practices in China reveals connections to a transnational network of lesbians and gay men at the same time that it brings urban/rural and class divisions to the fore. The 1999–2001 negotiations over China’s entry into the World Trade Organization; a controversial women’s museum; the ways that young single women portray their longings in relation to the privations they imagine their mothers experienced; adjudications of the limits of self-interest in court cases related to homoerotic desire, intellectual property, and consumer fraud—Rofel reveals all of these as sites where desiring subjects come into being.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780822389903
Publisher: Duke University Press
Publication date: 05/10/2007
Series: Perverse Modernities
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 264
File size: 536 KB

About the Author

Lisa Rofel is Professor of Anthropology at the University of California, Santa Cruz. She is the author of Other Modernities: Gendered Yearnings in China After Socialism and a coeditor of Engendering China: Women, Culture, and the State.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ix
Introduction 1
1. Yearnings: Televisual Love and Melodramatic Politics 31
2.  Museum as Women’s Space: Displays of Gender 65
3.  Qualities of Desire: Imagining Gay Identities 85
4.  From Sacrifice to Desire: Cosmopolitanism with Chinese Characteristics 111
5.  Legislating Desire: Homosexuality, Intellectual Property Rights, and Consumer Fraud 135
6.  Desiring China: China’s Entry into the WTO 157
Coda 197
Notes 205
Works Cited 229
Index 247
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