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Claiming Homes

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Explores how ‘care’, defined as ‘work done on behalf of others’, allows villagers to forge belonging and stake claims over the locality, its values, and each other, in defiance of the social excl...
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  • 03 October 2019
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Chinese citizens make themselves at home despite economic transformation, political rupture, and domestic dislocation in the contemporary countryside. By mobilizing labor and kinship to make claims over homes, people, and things, rural residents withstand devaluation and confront dispossession. As a particular configuration of red capitalism and socialist sovereignty takes root, this process challenges the relationship between the politics of place and the location of class in China and beyond.

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Price: $135.00
Pages: 260
Publisher: Berghahn Books
Imprint: Berghahn Books
Series: Dislocations
Publication Date: 03 October 2019
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781789203578
Format: Hardcover
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“Bruckermann provides a nuanced examination of the dynamics of gender, generation and class in Shanxi province. The ethnography is detailed and compelling.” • Andrew B. Kipnis, University of Hong Kong

“An excellent, pioneering analysis… I strongly recommend it.” • Stephan Feuchtwang, London School of Economics

Charlotte Bruckermann currently works in the Department of Social Anthropology at the University of Bergen. Her publications include a book co-written with Stephan Feuchtwang The Anthropology of China: China as Ethnographic and Theoretical Critique (2016, Imperial College Press), and various articles and chapters on environment, kinship, housing, care, morality, and ritual.

List of Figures
Acknowledgements
Notes on Transliteration

Introduction: The Countryside as Home

PART I: HISTORY, POLITICS, PLACE

Chapter 1. The Big Village
Chapter 2. Genealogies Revealed and Concealed

PART II: GENDER, GENERATION, KINSHIP

Chapter 3. Reproducing Kin across Generational Divides
Chapter 4. Gendered Aspirations in Marriage

PART III: LABOR, LOCATION, PRECARITY

Chapter 5. Fields, Food, and the Market
Chapter 6. Dangerous Domesticities

Conclusion: Claims, Belonging, and the Home

Postscript: Home as Workplace

References
Index