ABSTRACT

This book examines, in a culturally and contextually sensitive way, the particularity of what it means to be young in post-Mao China undergoing rapid and dramatic transformation by comparing childhood and youth experiences over three generations.

The analysis draws on life-history interviews with Beijing young men and women in their last upper secondary year, their parents and their grandparents. The book offers a comprehensive coverage of the various aspects of life pertinent to youth experiences and compares each of these across three generations, treating them as interrelated and mutually affecting processes – childhood, intergenerational relationships, education and future plans, gender and sexuality. By offering both men’s and women’s accounts of their childhood and youth experiences, which for the three generations combined extend over nearly a century, the book sheds useful light on how gender and sexuality have evolved in China. Fengshu Liu concludes that the young generation’s lives feature a ‘maximization desire’, in sharp contrast to the two older generations’ childhood and youth experiences.

The book meticulously weaves rich ethnographic details and individual life stories into a larger and unfolding picture of historical, social and cultural trends, while providing critical insight into Chinese modernization and modernity against the backdrop of globalization. It can thus be an enjoyable read also for people beyond the academia interested in China’s social and cultural transformation and its children and youth.

chapter Chapter 1|16 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter 2|30 pages

Modernization and social change

chapter Chapter 3|31 pages

The rise of the ‘priceless’ Chinese child

Childhood in three generations

chapter Chapter 4|37 pages

Daxue as the norm

The rise of the Chinese ‘schooled society’ over three generations

chapter Chapter 5|29 pages

The aspiring male individual

The rise of chenggong as a new hegemonic masculine ideal

chapter Chapter 6|32 pages

The aspiring female individual

‘Wanting to have it all’ as a new female ideal

chapter Chapter 7|28 pages

An expressive turn with a Chinese twist

Young people’s other-sex relations in three generations

chapter |19 pages

Conclusion

The maximization desire: living modernization the Chinese way