ABSTRACT

With a range of case studies from Asia, this book sheds light on empirical realizations of marginality in a globalized context using first-hand original research.

In the late 2000s, the financial crisis witnessed the fragility of high levels of market integration and the vulnerability of globalisation. Since then, the world seems to have entered an epoch of anxiety featuring populism with varying degrees of protectionism and nationalism. What is the nature of this populist mood as a backlash against globalisation? How do people feel about it and act upon it? Why should specific intellectual attention be paid to the increasingly marginalised by the recent macroscopic structural changes? These are the questions addressed by the contributors of this book, illustrated with specific cases from mainland China, Hong Kong and India, all of which have undergone substantial populist or nationalist movements since 2010.

A valuable resource for sociologists looking to understand the impacts of globalization, especially those with a particular interest in Asia.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

Why use the concept of marginality today?

part I|38 pages

Margins in Mainland China

chapter 1|19 pages

Home for fewer people

The demolishment of a farmers’ market and its long-term effect on the lower-skilled population in Beijing

chapter 2|17 pages

Rural Dama in China’s urbanization

From rural left-behind to urban strangers

part II|46 pages

Margins in Mainland China

chapter 3|20 pages

When a marginal area is transformed into a tourist hot spot

Tianzifang in Shanghai

chapter 4|24 pages

Cemeteries in Shanghai

Beyond the margins *

part III|52 pages

Margins in Hong Kong

chapter 5|25 pages

“My community doesn’t belong to me anymore!”

Tourism-driven spatial change and radicalized identity politics in Hong Kong

chapter 6|25 pages

Surviving the collective subjectivity of Choy Yuen Village

From multiple marginalizations to irreversible resistance

part IV|44 pages

Margins in India

chapter 7|23 pages

Waste in the urban margins

The example of Delhi’s waste pickers