Becoming Chinese |
Contents |
![]() | ILLUSTRATIONS |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
![]() | Introduction |
![]() | 1. The City and the Modern |
![]() | 1. The Cultural Construction of Modernity in Urban Shanghai |
![]() | 2. Marketing Medicine and Advertising Dreams in China, 1900–1950 |
![]() | 3. "A High Place Is No Better Than a Low Place" |
![]() | 4. Engineering China |
![]() | 5. Hierarchical Modernization |
![]() | 6. The Grounding of Cosmopolitans |
![]() | 2. The Nation and the Self |
![]() | 7. Zhang Taiyan's Concept of the Individual and Modern Chinese Identity |
• | I. THE PROVISIONAL CONCEPT OF INDIVIDUALITY |
![]() | II. THE MODERN NATION-STATE AND THE CONCEPT OF THE INDIVIDUATED SELF |
• | 1. Antistate and Antigovernmental Significance in the Concept of Individuality |
• | 2. The Relationship between the Individual and the People |
• | 3. Late Qing Statism and the Relationship between Individual and Nation |
• | 4. The Omission of Societal Space in the Binary Formulation of Individual and Nation |
• | 5. A Critique of the Parliamentary System |
• | 6. A Critique of Merchants as a Special Interest Group |
• | 7. The Rejection of Urban Political Organizations |
• | 8. The Rejection of Communities Based on Connections |
• | 9. Conclusion |
• | NOTES |
![]() | 8. Crime or Punishment? On the Forensic Discourse of Modern Chinese Literature |
![]() | 9. Hanjian (Traitor)! Collaboration and Retribution in Wartime Shanghai |
![]() | 10. Of Authenticity and Woman |
![]() | 11. Victory as Defeat |
CONTRIBUTORS |
Index |