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China's Millennials: The Want Generation

Autor Eric Fish
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 22 aug 2016
In 1989, students marched on Tiananmen Square demanding democratic reform. The Communist Party responded with a massacre, but it was jolted into restructuring the economy and overhauling the education of its young citizens. A generation later, Chinese youth are a world apart from those who converged at Tiananmen. Brought up with lofty expectations, they've been accustomed to unprecedented opportunities on the back of China's economic boom. But today, China's growth is slowing and its demographics rapidly shifting, with the boom years giving way to a painful hangover.

Immersed in this transition, Eric Fish, a millennial himself, profiles youth from around the country and how they are navigating the education system, the workplace, divisive social issues, and a resurgence in activism. Based on interviews with scholars, journalists, and hundreds of young Chinese, his engrossing book challenges the idea that today's youth have been pacified by material comforts and nationalism. Following rural Henan students struggling to get into college, a computer prodigy who sparked a nationwide patriotic uproar, and young social activists grappling with authorities, Fish deftly captures youthful struggle, disillusionment, and rebellion in a system that is scrambling to keep them in line-and, increasingly, scrambling to adapt when its youth refuse to conform.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781442272491
ISBN-10: 144227249X
Pagini: 268
Ilustrații: 15 b/w photos
Dimensiuni: 150 x 230 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.4 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Locul publicării:New York, United States

Cuprins

I: GETTING EDUCATED
1 Boot Camp
2 The Test
3 The University
4 The Patriots
II: GOING TO WORK
5 Factory Town
6 The Ants
7 The Golden Rice Bowl
8 The Entrepreneurs
III: COPING
9 The Leftovers
10 Eating Bitterness
11 Finding Faith
IV: PUSHING BACK
12 The Social Activists
13 The Environmentalists
14 The Journalists
15 Generations
Notes

Recenzii

In debunking generational stereotypes, Mr. Fish gives the future of the world's most populous country a human face. He also outlines a relationship between the youth and the state that is far more nuanced than many have suggested it to be. The question now is how that relationship will play out once the millennials become China's movers and shakers.
Empirically very rich, the book is highly entertaining. . . .[T]he book provides a good overview of a variety of social issues. Its detailed descriptions of society through ordinary people's eyes make the book a good read for anyone who is interested in contemporary Chinese society. It may serve well as a textbook for undergraduate students, or as an introduction to contemporary Chinese society for journalists and other interested non-academic readers.
In his new book, China's Millennials:The Want Generation, Mr. Fish draws on his years spent working as a teacher and journalist in China from 2007 to 2014 to give a multi-faceted look at the country's complicated younger generation. Through interviews with struggling factory workers, beleaguered recent graduates, social activists and others, he introduces readers to the generation born during the 1980s and '90s and coming of age at a time when China is newly ascendant on the world stage.
It obviously behooves Western companies to increase their understanding of China's millennials and many (most?) are trying. I was thinking about this today as I reach about the halfway point in the book, China's Millennials: The Want Generation, by Eric Fish. Though intended far more as a de Tocqueville-like report on China's youth, this well-written book actually makes for an excellent starting point for any company seeking to market to or employ China's millennials. Through first-hand reporting on the stories of China's young from all over the country, Fish provides a fascinating road-map on how China's millennials think. If you are looking to better understand China's youth, I highly recommend you read this book.
Through nuanced reporting, Eric Fish offers a meaningful comparison between China's youth today and the earlier "Tiananmen generation." The stark differences between them might foretell China's future.
People inside China and around the world will be affected by the values and intentions of China's next, rising generation of innovators, disruptors, parents, and citizens. The members of this 'Want Generation' were raised in increasing prosperity but now take their place in a country with dire environmental challenges, newly evident corruption problems, and uncertain political prospects. Eric Fish does a wonderful, accessible job of portraying the complexities of this new generation and the mixture of pride and dissatisfaction with which they regard their country and its future.
Eric Fish's rare and insightful look at China's millennials provides a firsthand description of a new generation unlike any that has come before it. In telling the personal stories of young people from all over China, Mr. Fish offers an invaluable perspective on a cohort that is becoming an important voice in the country-and one that is bound to play an increasingly key role in China's present and future.
Eric Fish's new work, China's Millennials, chronicles in entertaining, lucid prose the vicissitudes, triumphs, hopes, and prospects of the next generation of one of the world's most consequential countries. Fish's field of vision ranges from geopolitics to quotidian concerns, and he handles both well. While no one book can capture a generation of 250m, Fish's skillful and engaging mix of anecdotes, observation, and evidence should secure this work a place on the shelf of all who wish to understand the rise of China.
A really terrific book-one that is both entertaining and extremely informative. It brings to light a number of important trends underway in China today that are likely not well appreciated by many outside the country.