Available Formats
Guilty of Indigence: The Urban Poor in China, 1900-1953
By (Author) Janet Y. Chen
Princeton University Press
Princeton University Press
10th February 2014
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Urban communities
Social and cultural history
362.50951
Paperback
320
Width 152mm, Height 235mm
482g
In the early twentieth century, a time of political fragmentation and social upheaval in China, poverty became the focus of an anguished national conversation about the future of the country. Investigating the lives of the urban poor in China during this critical era, Guilty of Indigence examines the solutions implemented by a nation attempting to
"The book does a marvelous job of analyzing the discourse surrounding poverty in China. [I]t certainly belongs on the short list of pioneering studies ... that offer sophisticated analyses of the lives of illiterate, unprivileged men and women in Chinese cities in the decades before establishment of the People's Republic of China in 1949."--Kristin Stapleton, American Historical Review "This book makes an important contribution to the field of modern Chinese history... Janet Y. Chen provides new insight into how the notion of poverty was redefined during this tumultuous and complicated period. Although the ideas and arguments are complex and sophisticated, this is a clearly argued and crisply written book, one that could be easily used in part or in whole in an upper division undergraduate course."--Hong-Ming Liang, Historian "This book is a veritable model of a social history monograph--one that aspiring PhD students would do well to emulate... It is unusual for a monograph so firmly placed within social history to be as attentive to the unenviable positions in which both weak governments and weak citizens found themselves, but in this Chen's work more than succeeds."--Julia C. Strauss, China Journal
Janet Y. Chen is assistant professor of history and East Asian Studies at Princeton University.