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The Libidinal Economy of China: Gender, Nationalism, and Consumer Culture

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

The Libidinal Economy of China: Gender, Nationalism, and Consumer Culture

Contributors:
ISBN:

9780739192627

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Lexington Books

Publication Date:

29th October 2015

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Professional and Scholarly

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Gender studies: women and girls

Dewey:

305.40951

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

152

Dimensions:

Width 157mm, Height 239mm, Spine 15mm

Weight:

345g

Description

This study of postsocialist China explores the development of a Chinese consumer culture in the 1990s with a special focus on advertising and shifting ideals on female beauty. On an analytical level it is an investigation into Chinese nationalism that demonstrates how the desire for recognition as a powerful nation is linked to anxieties about Chinese femininity. The book is also, on a theoretical level, about the libidinal economy of an imaginary China. In other words it attempts to unravel the sexuality of geopolitics by describing the association between femininity and China in popular culture and nationalist discourse. In addition to advertisements, political writings, plays, and films, the archive for this inquiry consists of fieldwork observations and interviews. The Libidinal Economy of China engages a range of post-colonial and psychoanalytically informed thinkers in a truly cross disciplinary study. Lacanian theories on hysteria, femininity, and narcissism are applied in the international domain of geopolitics to formulate a general theory on Chinas relationship to the West. David Eng and Homi Bhabha are employed for discussing racial fetishism in contemporary China, while Slavoj ieks ideas on violence and the Other are engaged in explaining the emotional dimension of national identification. The study concludes that China and the New Chinese Nationalism is firmly under the gaze of a Western Other analogous to a male gaze. That Other rules the libidinal economy of consumer culture, which explains Chinas recurring history of wanting to emulate and catch up with the West while simultaneously reacting to such an attained intimacy with castration anxiety and aggressive hysteria.

Author Bio

Perry Johansson is professor at the David C. Lam Institute for East-West Studies at Hong Kong Baptist University.

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