The post-Mao urban reforms of the past decade have physically and psychologically transformed China's cities. Urban Spaces in Contemporary China explores how the character of city life changed after political-economic restructuring intensified in 1984, and how this change affected the creation of new physical, economic and cultural space in urban China. Drawing on a wide range of backgrounds, including economics, art history, law, and sociology, the authors bring personal insights to dimensions of urban Chinese life that are often misunderstood: China's large "floating populations," avant-garde art, labor movements, and leisure.
1 Multi-discipline perspective
2 Authors draw on a variety of sources: cinema, videos, sculpture, aerial photographs, painting, interviews, performance art, statistical surveys.
3 Each author has lived and worked in a Chinese city for an extended time in the late 1980s or early 1990s
Deborah S. Davis, Yale University, Connecticut
Richard Kraus, University of Oregon
Barry Naughton, University of California, San Diego
Elizabeth J. Perry, University of California, Berkeley
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