
Material Contradictions in Mao's China
- 264 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
Material Contradictions in Mao's China
About this book
An excavation of the sociocultural, economic, and political history of everyday commodities The growth of markets and consumerism in China's post-Mao era of political and economic reform is a story familiar to many. By contrast, the Mao period (1949–1976)—rightly framed as a time of scarcity—initially appears to have had little material culture to speak of. Yet people attributed great meaning to materials and objects often precisely because they were rare and difficult to obtain. This first volume devoted to the material history of the period explores the paradox of material culture under Chinese Communist Party rule and illustrates how central materiality was to individual and collective desire, social and economic construction of the country, and projections of an imminent socialist utopia within reach of every man and woman, if only they worked hard enough. Bringing together scholars of Chinese art, cinema, culture, performance, and more, this volume shares groundbreaking research on the objects and practices of everyday life in Mao's China, from bamboo and bricks to dance and film. With engaging narratives and probing analysis, the contributors make a place for China's experience in the history of global material culture and the study of socialist modernity.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Making Revolution Material
- 1. Bamboo Objects and Socialist Construction
- 2. The Brick
- 3. Design and Handicraft
- 4. Dance Props and the Rural Imaginary
- 5. Mobile Projectionists and the Things They Carried
- 6. Outside Objects and Material Propaganda
- 7. The Problematics of Plenty
- 8. Nationalizing Food Provision in Beijing
- 9. One Country, Two Material Cultures
- 10. The Makings of China’s Cold War Motor City
- Afterword: Material Culture and the Socialist Uncanny in Mao’s China
- Chinese Character Glossary
- Selected Bibliography
- List of Contributors
- Index