ID | 073643 |
Title Proper | China's new order and past disorders |
Other Title Information | a dialogue starting from Wang Hui's analysis |
Language | ENG |
Author | Pozzana, Claudia ; Russo, Alessandro |
Publication | 2006. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | This dialogue develops a series of reflections on contemporary Chinese politics starting from Wang Hui's analysis of the role that the repression of the spring 1989 movement played in the acceleration of China's neoliberalist economic policies, and more in general about the peculiar forms of intervention of the party-state in the implementation of capitalist forms of economy. Four major issues are discussed: some probings of the political value of the Tiananmen movement; the suppression of the agricultural people's communes; the parallel transformation of the industrial danwei system; and the rise of Deng Xiaoping's strategy as a form of reactive subjectivity toward the political experiments of the late sixties and early seventies. The authors argue that the major consistency in the Chinese state today is the process of harsh depoliticization of subjectivities deployed during the Cultural Revolution, and retrospectively throughout the entire twentieth century in China. On the other hand, this process of depoliticization shows a weakness in consistency, since it basically depends on a "radical negation" and, in the end, lacks autonomous subjective strength. |
`In' analytical Note | Critical Asian Studies Vol. 38, No. 3; Sep 2006: p329-351 |
Journal Source | Critical Asian Studies Vol: 38 No 3 |
Key Words | China ; Political Development ; Economic Development |