Description
Book SynopsisInvestigates the emotional and moral lives of the Chinese people as they adjust to the challenges of modernity. Sharing a medical anthropology and cultural psychiatry perspective, this title delves into intimate and sometimes hidden areas of personal life and social practice to observe and narrate the drama of Chinese individualization.
Trade Review"Essential... This is one of the most important books on China to be published in recent years." -- Susan D. Blum, The University of Notre Dame The China Journal "This book should be highly praised... Good reading for anyone interested in Sinology, politics, economics, anthropology, sociology and mental health." -- Diana Soeiro Metapsychology Online Review "Fascinating... Deep China seeks to explore through the lenses of psychiatry and sociology the effects on the individual." -- Rui Zheng British Journal Of Psychiatry
Table of ContentsPreface Introduction: Remaking the Moral Person in a New China 1. The Changing Moral Landscape Yunxiang Yan 2. From Commodity of Death to Gift of Life Jing Jun 3. China's Sexual Revolution Everett Yuehong Zhang 4. Place Attachment, Communal Memory, and the Moral Underpinnings of Gentrification in Postreform Shanghai Pan Tianshu 5. Depression: Coming of Age in China Sing Lee 6. Suicide, a Modern Problem in China Wu Fei 7. Stigma: HIV/AIDS, Mental Illness, and China's Nonpersons Guo Jinhua and Arthur Kleinman 8. Quests for Meaning Arthur Kleinman Glossary of Chinese Terms and Names Notes on Contributors Index