1st Edition

Two-Dimensional People Lives, Desires, and Social Attitudes in a Changing Chinese Village

By Tan Tongxue Copyright 2023
    392 Pages 29 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Based on almost eight years of fieldwork in a town and a village in South China, this book analyzes contradictions among various dimensions of the peasant economy, social relationships, popular religion, and local politics in rural China.

    Compared to many anthropological, sociological, and political studies of rural China, which regard Chinese peasants as one-dimensionally materialistic, politically conservative, egocentric (lacking public-mindedness, as in anthropologist Yan Yunxiang’s notion of the "uncivil individual"), with collapsed beliefs, and thinking only of the present (or the "today-ness of today" according to anthropologist Liu Xin), this book shows that people in contemporary rural China are actually "two-dimensional": trying to combine the calculation of self-interest with affective networks of reciprocity, but often falling into awkwardness or cynicism, in a paradoxical symbiosis between nihilism and transcendence. While Marcuse used the words of Benjamin to analyze "one-dimensional man," writing "Only for the sake of the hopeless ones have we been given hope," this book writes of two-dimensional people, "Only when the vast majority of ordinary people can find hope in everyday life can we finally be given hope!"

    This book will be of interest to scholars and students of Sociology, Anthropology and East Asian Studies. It will also be a great read to those who are interested in contemporary China in general.

    Part I Text 1. An Ancient Confucian Village  2. A Centralist Cadre  3. A Peasant Boss  4. Two Intellectuals  5. An Authoritarian Official  6. An Ordinary Peasant  7. The Younger Generation  Part II Reflections  8. The Paradox of Transition  9. From the Past to the Present

    Biography

    Tan Tongxue is a Professor at the School of Ethnology and Sociology, Yunnan University, China. His research interests include studies of peasant economies, village morality, grass-roots politics, and social consciousness. He is also the author of Way of Bridge Village, published in China, 2010.