China's New Order

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China's New Order

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ISBN: 9780674009325
作者: Hui Wang
译者: Rebecca E. Karl
出版社: Harvard University Press
发行时间: 2003 -11
装订: Hardcover
价格: USD 22.95
页数: 256

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Society, Politics, and Economy in Transition

Hui Wang    Rebecca E. Karl

简介

As the world is drawn together with increasing force, our long-standing isolation from--and baffling ignorance of--China is ever more perilous. This book offers a powerful analysis of China and the transformations it has undertaken since 1989.
Wang Hui is unique in China's intellectual world for his ability to synthesize an insider's knowledge of economics, politics, civilization, and Western critical theory. A participant in the Tiananmen Square movement, he is also the editor of the most important intellectual journal in contemporary China. He has a grasp and vision that go beyond contemporary debates to allow him to connect the events of 1989 with a long view of Chinese history. Wang Hui argues that the features of contemporary China are elements of the new global order as a whole in which considerations of economic growth and development have trumped every other concern, particularly those of democracy and social justice. At its heart this book represents an impassioned plea for economic and social justice and an indictment of the corruption caused by the explosion of "market extremism."
As Wang Hui observes, terms like "free" and "unregulated" are largely ideological constructs masking the intervention of highly manipulative, coercive governmental actions on behalf of economic policies that favor a particular scheme of capitalist acquisition--something that must be distinguished from truly free markets. He sees new openings toward social, political, and economic democracy in China as the only agencies by which the unstable conditions thus engendered can be remedied.

目录

Preface
Introduction [Theodore Huters] 1
The 1989 Social Movement and the Historical Roots of China’s Neoliberalism 41
1. The Historical Conditions of the 1989 Social Movement and the Antihistorical Explanation of “Neoliberalism” 46
2. The Three Stages of Thought in the 1990s and Their Major Problems 78
3. Alternative Globalizations and the Question of the Modern 116
Contemporary Chinese Thought and the Question of Modernity (1997) 139
Notes 189
Index 223

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