Secrets and Siblings: The Vanished Lives of China's One Child Policy
Thirty-two years ago Mrs Li and Mr Wu from Zhejiang abandoned their second baby daughter at a marketplace. Mrs Wang Maochen from Beijing has seven children, but six of them are illegal so they could not go to university, could not take a job, go to the doctor, or marry, or even buy a train ticket. Zhao Min from Guangzhou first learned about the concept of a sibling at university, in her town there were no sisters or brothers.

With the Chinese government now adapting to a two child policy, Secrets and Siblings outlines the scale of its tragic consequences, showing how Chinese family and society has been forever changed. In doing so it also challenges many of our misconceptions about family life in China, arguing that it is the state, rather than popular prejudice, that has hindered the adoption of girls within China.

At once brutal and beautifully hopeful, Secrets and Siblings asks what the state and its children will do now that they are becoming adults.

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Secrets and Siblings: The Vanished Lives of China's One Child Policy
Thirty-two years ago Mrs Li and Mr Wu from Zhejiang abandoned their second baby daughter at a marketplace. Mrs Wang Maochen from Beijing has seven children, but six of them are illegal so they could not go to university, could not take a job, go to the doctor, or marry, or even buy a train ticket. Zhao Min from Guangzhou first learned about the concept of a sibling at university, in her town there were no sisters or brothers.

With the Chinese government now adapting to a two child policy, Secrets and Siblings outlines the scale of its tragic consequences, showing how Chinese family and society has been forever changed. In doing so it also challenges many of our misconceptions about family life in China, arguing that it is the state, rather than popular prejudice, that has hindered the adoption of girls within China.

At once brutal and beautifully hopeful, Secrets and Siblings asks what the state and its children will do now that they are becoming adults.

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Secrets and Siblings: The Vanished Lives of China's One Child Policy

Secrets and Siblings: The Vanished Lives of China's One Child Policy

by Mari Manninen
Secrets and Siblings: The Vanished Lives of China's One Child Policy

Secrets and Siblings: The Vanished Lives of China's One Child Policy

by Mari Manninen

Paperback(1)

$19.95 
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Overview

Thirty-two years ago Mrs Li and Mr Wu from Zhejiang abandoned their second baby daughter at a marketplace. Mrs Wang Maochen from Beijing has seven children, but six of them are illegal so they could not go to university, could not take a job, go to the doctor, or marry, or even buy a train ticket. Zhao Min from Guangzhou first learned about the concept of a sibling at university, in her town there were no sisters or brothers.

With the Chinese government now adapting to a two child policy, Secrets and Siblings outlines the scale of its tragic consequences, showing how Chinese family and society has been forever changed. In doing so it also challenges many of our misconceptions about family life in China, arguing that it is the state, rather than popular prejudice, that has hindered the adoption of girls within China.

At once brutal and beautifully hopeful, Secrets and Siblings asks what the state and its children will do now that they are becoming adults.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781786997333
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 11/30/2019
Edition description: 1
Pages: 240
Product dimensions: 5.28(w) x 8.52(h) x 0.67(d)

About the Author

Mari Manninen is a Finnish jourbanalist, currently writing for the daily newspaper Helsingin Sanomat. She lived for four years in Beijing, where she reported on China's rapidly changing society for a number of newspapers and magazines.
Mari Manninen is a Finnish jourbanalist, currently writing for the daily newspaper Helsingin Sanomat. She lived for four years in Beijing, where she reported on China's rapidly changing society for a number of newspapers and magazines.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments vii

In the Beginning 1

The 36-year experiment that transformed the life of every person in China.

1 Undocumented 24

2 Unborn 43

3 No Family 65

4 No Discipline 94

5 No Brothers 121

6 No Wives 133

7 No Children 152

8 No Mercy 169

9 The Usual Story 181

How Is Everyone Doing Now? 197

Key Sources, Recommended Reading, and References 212

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