The ironies of freedom : sex, culture, and neoliberal governance in Vietnam
著者
書誌事項
The ironies of freedom : sex, culture, and neoliberal governance in Vietnam
(Critical dialogues in Southeast Asian studies / Charles Keyes, Vicente Rafael, Laurie J. Sears, series editors)
University of Washington Press, c2008
- : hardback
- : pbk
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注記
Includes bibliographical references (p. 297-319) and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
In the late 1980s, Vietnam joined the global economy after decades of war and relative isolation, demonstrating how a former socialist government can adapt to global market forces with their neoliberal emphasis on freedom of choice for entrepreneurs and consumers. The Ironies of Freedom examines an aspect of this new market: commercial sex.
Nguyen-vo offers an ambitious analysis of gender and class conflicts surrounding commercial sex as a site of market freedom, governmental intervention, and depictions in popular culture to argue that these practices reveal the paradoxical nature of neoliberalism. What the case of Vietnam highlights is that governing with current neoliberal globalization may and does take paradoxical forms, sustained not by some vestige from times past but by contemporary conditions. Of mutual benefit to both the neoliberal global economy and the ruling party in Vietnam is the use of empirical knowledge and entrepreneurial and consumer's choice differentially among segments of the population to produce different kinds of laborers and consumers for the global market. But also of mutual benefit to both are the police, the prison, and notions of cultural authenticity enabled by a ruling party with well-developed means of coercion from its history. The freedom-unfreedom pair in governance creates a tension in modes of representation conducive to a new genre of sensational social realism in literature and popular films like the 2003 Bar Girls about two women in the sex trade, replete with nudity, booze, drugs, violence, and death. The movie opened in Vietnam with unprecedented box office receipts, blazing a trail for a commercially viable domestic film industry.
Combining methods and theories from the social sciences and humanities, Nguyen-vo's analysis relies on fieldwork conducted in Ho Chi Minh City and its vicinity, in-depth interviews with informants, participant observation at selected sites of sexual commerce and governmental intervention, journalistic accounts, and literature and films.
This book will appeal to historians and political scientists of Southeast Asia and to scholars of gender and sexuality, cultural studies, postcolonial studies, and political theory dealing with neoliberalism.
目次
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part One | Sex for Sale: Entrepreneurial and Consumerist Freedom
1. The Hooking Economy: Entrepreneurial Choice and Commercial Sex in the Liberalizing Economy
2. Hierarchy and Geography: Class and National Identity in Sex Consumption
Part Two | The Real and the True: Governing by Choice and Coercion
3. The Rise of the Empirical and the Case of Medical Expertise: A Genealogy of Governance
4. Governing Passion: Consumers' Choice and the Production of a Differentiated Citizenry in Public Medicine
5. Who You Truly Are: Coercion, Culture, and the Global Imaginary in the Governmental Rehabilitation of Sex Workers
6. What Kind of Power? Specialization of Intervention and the Coexisting Modes of Governance
Part Three | To the Real: Ideology and Cultural Production
7. From Antigone to the Kneeling Woman: A Genealogy of the Real from Socialism to the Preparation for Marketization
8. Love in the Time of Neoliberalism: Ideology and the New Social Realism in Popular Culture
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index
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