Professional Documents
Culture Documents
1.1 .............................................................................. 7
1.2 ..................................................................................................... 10
1.3 .................................................................................................. 11
1.4 ........................................................................................... 12
1.5 ................................................................................................................. 14
2 ...................................................... 17
2.1 ......................................................................................................... 18
2.2 ................................................................................... 20
2.3 ............................................................................... 21
2.4 .................................................................................................. 24
2.5 .................................................................................................. 26
2.6 ............................................................................... 28
3 .................................................................................... 31
3.1 ............................................................................................... 35
3.2 ......................................................................................................... 39
3.3 ...................................................... 41
4 ............................................................................ 49
4.1 .............................................................................. 49
4.2 ............................................................................... 51
4.3 .................................................................................................. 60
4.4 ................................................................................... 61
4.5 ............................................................................... 66
4.6 ................................................................................... 69
5 ..................................................................... 72
5.1 ................................................................................... 73
5.2 ......................................................... 74
5.3 ................................................................................... 75
5.4 ................................................................................................................. 77
5.5 ................................................................. 79
2
5.6 ...................................................................................................... 80
5.7 .................................................................................................. 82
5.8 ............................................................................ 83
5.9 ....................................................................................... 87
5.10 ........................................................................................................... 88
6 ............................................................................................... 90
6.1 ............................................................................................................. 91
6.2 ................................................................................................................. 93
6.3 PERVERTED BODIES ......................................................................... 96
6.4 ................................................................................................................. 97
6.5 ......................................................................................................... 97
6.6 ............................................................................................................. 99
6.7 ..................................................................................... 101
6.8 ............................................................................................................... 102
7 .................................................................................. 105
8 ......................................................................................... 120
............................................................................................................. 125
............................................................................................................. 138
3
1
1993 11 19
80
50 20
1990
300
1991 5
12
600
21
configuration
12 just-in-time production
Croll 1995Davised. 2000Chen et al. 2001
Pun 2003Yan 2003
state plans-international
--
market party-state-planning nexus
--party-state-market complex
20
Shue 1988
4-5
-
2
3
25
26 Pun 2000
18-25
Chan 2001Lau 2001
Liu
1996Lee 1998bBlecher 2002Perry 2002
4 1992
Certeau 1984Scott 1994
1993
500
1.1
80
-
Alan Tourain
1995201-202
Appadurai 1996
Ong & Nonini
1997Rofel 1999
7
Appadurai 1996
dialogic space
Michel Foucault self technology
self-knowledge1997
87Foucault
87-88
87
articulation88
Foucault
20
5
Honig 1986Hershatter 1986Perry 1993
Tam 1992Lee 1998aPun 1999
Andors1983 Wolf1985
Stacey1983
Foucault
Alan Touraine
20
Ann Anagnost199717-44
signifiedsignifer
-
interpellate
infrapolitics6
1.2
Lee 1998a
20
30
Walder 1986
10
Touraine 1995207 Alan Touraine
1.3
(Pun 1999)
Nash & Safa
1976Ong 1987Stitcher & Parpart 1990Ward 1990
11
Croll 1995
Evans 1997
Certeau 1984
Ong
1991
1.4
20
80%1995 1996
Paul Rabinow1986
out there
12
1978 1978
1995
1995 8
1995 11
13
1.5
-
-
Foucault 1979
14
sexualizing
sexed subject
Foucault1978
sexed
gendering
sexual reorientation
sexed body
Arthur Kleinman1995
Julia Kristeva1986
Bataille 1985
Foucault1985
15
16
2
1995
discursive dyslexia
17
2.1
Thompson1963
Thompson
McLennan 1982
Thompson
Gregor Mclennan
1982109
making
18
9
Thompson
McLennan 19639-11
19975Kalb
reductionism
reificationessentialism6-7
Gregor Mclennan1982112Thompson
Fred Chiu
2003220
condensation displacement
representation
Perry 1996
class in itselfclass for itself
19
80
10
Jacques Derrida
Derrida
1994xx
7
2.2
11
Andrew Walder1986
1926
1965,
13 20 200 200
18-19
20
12
Schram1969
20
20 70
80
leung 1988Walder 1989Sargeson 1999
2.3
7 8
10
1990
13
1985
14
21
20
60
Foucault1986
heterotopia
anachronism
1985
1981
1984
1992
60
13
--
22
Lin 1995
80
2,000 15 1984
5060
1985
20
15,000-20,000
90
Foucault 1986
22-27
80%
23
-Harding
1994Perry 1994
-
Harding 1994
Elizabeth Perry1994
-
Bian 1994Lin 1995
2.4
1979
1980 5
24
2,020
327.5
310,000 30,000
1995 345 245 2000
433 309 30%
70%
2000 308
2001
Andors 1988
3 5
1988 1 80
16
19 20 6070
Burawoy 1976Cheng & Bonacich
1984Sassen 1988
Walder 198648-54
Andors
1988Tam 1992Smart & Smart 1992Lee 1998a
17 Phyllis Andors198831-32
1988 70%Josephine Smart199310
90% 25 1989
25
2.5
18
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80
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350,000 / 60
Andors 1988
90
1988
1
26
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19
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300-400 /
400 100
400 /
400 160,000
160,000
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750 /
27
70% 1996
240 /
2.6
1958
Solinger 19918
20
80
21
300 // 100 //
22
28
Andors 198840-41
Solinger1999
cotested citizenship
()()
1991
80
3-5
29
Zhang 2001c
30
3
1996 3 4
1
200
16 18
23
20
526
50 40
20
10
31
X 375 200-300
30
20
32
open
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18 2 16
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33
10
320
2.5
23
20
34
3.1
24 1999 1 27 2000
1 2,000 Loraine West Zhao Yaohui200041982-1997
1 1,200 750
Sarah Cook Margaret Maurer-Fazio1999 1996 4,500
7,000 1 2,000 1996
1991 500
1993 1,000 1 2000292
74.4%
2000 8,000 1
2,000 1,000
15
-
25 90
26
27
35
1992
36
37
22
1990 6
1990 10
11
1,500
Pun 2001
Fardon 1987
Honig
1986
-
Fardon 1987176
28
38
3.2
19839
(Johnson 1983Kung 1983)
40
-
(Johnson 1983Stacey 1983)
--
39
29
Margery Wolf19729
(womens community)
Johnson
1983,15
()
John Buck1937 30
16%
9%Hsiao-tung Fei Chih-I Chang1945
20 20
Johnson 1984
Pruitt1967175
Evelyn Rawski197247
4-5
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13 197255
20
Topley 1975Stockard 1989
1949
Emily Honig 1949
19861
40
3.3
Marx 19641844
110
at home
at home
at home
at home
110-11
IAlthusser1990
12 500-600
41
23
20
1981 8
3.5 2
80
80
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42
2,000
5 2,000
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Margery Wolf1972
43
40
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20
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44
31 90
1989
15
500
45
Marx
& Engels 1976, 72
20 50
1993
Wang 2000
373-4051978 1984 15%
80 90 1985 1990
199257-58
90
1999 1978
1978
200 1997 3,000
1.5
2.0
4 Wang 2000386-88
46
GDP 4.5 GDP
37%Wang 2000388Carl RiskinZhao Li2001
3
WTO
2000
2010 1 3,000 1 5,000
Wang 2000397
Zhang 2001a
90
1985 7 13
3 16
Shi 199631 80 90
1985
1994 12
10
47
48
4
Foucault1979
32
imagineering
Certeau 1984
4.1
Rofel 1999257-58
49
deterritorization
Zhang 2001c
panoptic surveillance
Marx 19541865
Yan 2001
Rofel 1999
habitus
33
50
4.2
34
10 4 20 25
15 20
art of space
18
22
MB201 route-finder
35
12 2 3
51
136
COMMS
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praxis
Mikolos Haraszti1971
59
197854
4.3
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38
4.4
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39
4 11 12
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15
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12
5 10 15 100 500
4.6
presence
69
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Foucault
1979184-85
41
Chan 2001
70
Lee1998a
Chan 2001
71
5
Dorinne Kondo
199016
42
work hierarchy
43
lee 1998
72
-
Foucault -
199481-82
5.1
1995 6
8
B
B
B
12
73
5.2
15
74
5.3
30
Solinger 1999
1996 550 11
reterritorialize
75
Foucault1988
76
Frantz Fanon1952
1996
5.4
4:30
30
4:30
77
50
44
78
5.5
Lee 1998
where are you from
-
-
-
-
79
-
Hareven 1982
45
--
B 20 8 5
3 3 1
5.6
80
-
15 20
1,000-1,500
1996 2.4 7
3.6
300
2 5
20 50 50
46
500-600
400-600
3
-
81
5.7
1996 4 10
11
82
5.8
47 Bourdieu199152-54
83
84
Bourdieu199252
alterity
deficient reality
Huck Gutman1988112
imaginarythe real
Deleuze & Guattari 1984
34
85
()
()
()
sexgendergendered subject
Foucault1979
asexual subject
sexualization
86
5.9
21
sexual identity
dividual self
Foucault 1978bio-power
48
87
5.10
1994
22
88
89
6
project of renegotiating
sex talk
Evans 1997
Baudrillardian1993
Elisabeth Croll
1995151
80
OK
90
Foucault1978154preset
modality of sexualitysexed
sex
49
(
Butler 1990
90
Harriet Evans
1997156
6.1
91
Judith Butler19931
sexgender
92
Bulter
19933
Marlyn Strathern198819
sexuality
Irigaray
197725
6.2
femininity
500 75%
93
50
40 1987
350
1985
94
90%
1996 5
2 2
6 3 1
8 2 3 1
6 4 8 1
9 28 12
284 15 1 2
72 4 5
46 6
8 6
9 15
95
sexual segregation
30%
world of sexual hierarchies
gender hierarchies
96
Moore 1994
6.4
10
10 12
sexually prescribed
6.5
97
Spencer 1980
40
60
Anagnost 1997
98
Ardner 197510
Croll 199511-12
6.6
99
Paul Willis198129
100
gender subjectivities
6.7
Yan 1997
1996 4 28
gendered subject
101
1 2
6.8
50
90
11
102
(negative hallucination)I
other
103
1954
104
7
8 10
minor genre of resistance
17
18
105
7.1
Elaine Scarry1985
sense of otherness
foreign culturealien space
reality Michel
de Certeau 1984xxi
showbiz academicspre-language
presenceunpresence
106
7.2
11
Cathy Caruth
199691
13
1996 3
1996
83
7.3
24
107
12
20
3
51
Gassart 1985
20
108
Gassart 1985122-123
24
46
50
109
Kleinman 19926
Arthur Kleinman
1992174
187
7.4
Julie Kristeva
Kristeva
110
1986187
Emily Martin
1987198
19
Martin 1987
5 7
Emily Martin
18721
111
personae
Martin 1987
Laing 1967
1969
R. D. Laing
196746-47
Laing1969
7.5
112
Bartky 1990
-
7.6
24
19
113
200
500
30
600
40
114
Ong 1987
impersonalization
being-in-the world
realityreal
115
7.7
12
10
550 50
116
24
24
2324 16 24
12
7.8
117
Foucault Foucault
Foucault
198543
49
Foucault
Foucault
47
Martin Heidegger1988
existenz
transcendental sense
24
118
deterritorialized space
119
8
2001 7 35
20
90
30 20
90
50 90
120
2000
52
8.1
21
EyalSzelennyi & Eleanor Townsley
1998
80
121
1993
20
122
-
-
Alain Touraine
1995210
Jean Comaroff
1985260
realpolitiks of resistance
261-62
Scott 1900
James Scott1990hidden
transcriptsinfrapolitics
Scott
123
199028
hallucinating
effects
124
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