Ann Anagnost is Professor of Anthropology at the University of Washington.
Andrea Arai is Lecturer in the Jackson School of International Studies, University of Washington.
Hai Ren is Associate Professor of East Asian Studies and Anthropology at the University of Arizona.
The East Asian economic miracle of the twentieth century is now a fond memory. What does it mean to be living in post-miracle times? For the youth of China, Taiwan, Japan, and South Korea, the opportunities and challenges of the neoliberal age, deeply shaped by global forces in labor markets, powerfully frame their life prospects in ways that are barely recognizable to their parents.
Global Futures in East Asia gathers together ethnographic explorations of what its contributors call projects of "life-making." Here we see youth striving to understand themselves, their place in society, and their career opportunities in the nation, region, and world. While some express optimism, it is clear that many others dread their prospects in the competitive global system in which the failure to thrive is isolating, humiliating, and possibly even fatal.
Deeply engaged with some of the most significant theoretical debates in the social sciences in recent years, and rich with rare cross-national comparisons, this collection will be of great interest to all scholars and students interested in the formation of subjects and subjectivities under globalization and neoliberalism.
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里面的文章都很不错 对于反思中国是否存在neoliberal subjectivity有启发
评分Asian youths' self-making in a neoliberal age of uncertainty and disaffection
评分里面的文章都很不错 对于反思中国是否存在neoliberal subjectivity有启发
评分Asian youths' self-making in a neoliberal age of uncertainty and disaffection
评分Asian youths' self-making in a neoliberal age of uncertainty and disaffection
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