The Chinese pursuit of happiness : anxieties, hopes, and moral tensions in everyday life
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The Chinese pursuit of happiness : anxieties, hopes, and moral tensions in everyday life
(A Philip E. Lilienthal book)
University of California Press, c2019
- : pbk
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 171-181) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
What defines "happiness," and how can we attain it? The ways in which people in China ask and answer this universal question tell a lot about the tensions and challenges they face during periods of remarkable political and economic change.
Based on a five-year original study conducted by a select team of China experts, The Chinese Pursuit of Happiness begins by asking if Chinese citizens' assessment of their life is primarily a judgment of their social relationships. The book shows how different dimensions of happiness are manifest in the moral and ethical understandings that embed individuals in specific communities. Vividly describing the moral dilemmas experienced in contemporary Chinese society, the rituals of happiness performed in modern weddings, the practices of conviviality carried out in shared meals, the professional tensions confronted by social workers, and the hopes and frustrations shared by political reformers, the contributors to this important study illuminate the causes of anxiety and reasons for hope in China today.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Becky Yang Hsu
1. The Changing Notion of Happiness: A History of Xingfu
Lang Chen
2. Having It All: Filial Piety, Moral Weighting, and Anxiety among Young Adults
Becky Yang Hsu
3. Performing Happiness for Self and Others: Weddings in Shanghai
Deborah S. Davis
4. Happy and Unhappy Meals: Culinary Expressions of the Good Life in Shanghai
James Farrer
5. Making the People or the Government Happy? Dilemmas of Social Workers in a Morally Pluralistic Society
Richard Madsen
6. Deriving Happiness from Making Society Better: Chinese Activists as Warring Gods
Chih-Jou Jay Chen
Epilogue
Richard Madsen
References
Contributors
Index
by "Nielsen BookData"