Description

Book Synopsis
Long known as the world's factory, China is the largest manufacturing economy ever seen, accounting for more than 10% of global exports. China is also, of course, home to the largest workforce on the planet, the crucial element behind its staggering economic success.

Trade Review
"This book lucidly exposes the underside of the Chinese economic miracle, revealing the plight of the migrant laborers who are part of the world’s largest working class. Drawing on rich ethnographic data as well as careful political and economic analysis, Pun Ngai examines the conditions these workers face daily both on the job and in the dormitories. She also documents their recent radicalization and militancy, suggesting that, in China at least, working-class struggle is alive and well, contrary to popular belief. An authoritative overview that will be useful for students and general readers alike."
Ruth Milkman, City University of New York

"The re-making of the Chinese working class is one of the greatest stories of contemporary world history. With her well-grounded account of the struggles of migrant workers, Pun Ngai has given us a generous and insightful version of this vast transformation."
Andrew Ross, New York University, author of Fast Boat to China: Lessons from Shanghai

"In a series of engaged and engaging studies of China’s massive transformation, Pun Ngai exposes the despotic worlds of dormitory regimes, militarized factories, and subcontracted workers, creating a terrifying vision of an insurgent proletariat. Anyone interested in the future of planet Earth must take her findings into account."
Michael Burawoy, University of California, Berkeley

"Pun Ngai, one of the most cited scholars in this field, will again fascinate the readers with her recent book […]. Her book covers a topic that has received wide coverage, yet this work displays the vigour and passion of an activist scholar who used to complete her ethnography by working and living as a factory worker."
Journal of Contemporary Asia


”Stepping away from Marx’s classical approach of capitalist production, Pun Ngai employs cultural class analysis through a theoretical lens by situating her research in the working labourers’ living experience. This methodology provides a vivid portrait of the working labour of China.”
Asian Journal of Social Science

Table of Contents
  • Introduction: What Is to Be Done with Philosophy?
  • Part One: A Generic Introduction
  • Chapter 1: Theory of the Philosophical Decision
  • Chapter 2: The Style of Non-Philosophy
  • Part Two: Unified Theories and the Waves of Non-Philosophy
  • Chapter 3: Politics, or a Democracy (of) Thought
  • Chapter 4: Science, or Philosophy’s Other
  • Chapter 5: Ethics, or Universalizing the Stranger-Subject
  • Chapter 6: Aesthetics, or Non-Philosophy as Philo-Fiction
  • Chapter 7: Religion, or a Rigorous Heresy
  • Conclusion: The Future of Non-Philosophy

Migrant Labor in China

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    A Paperback / softback by Pun Ngai

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      View other formats and editions of Migrant Labor in China by Pun Ngai

      Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
      Publication Date: 04/03/2016
      ISBN13: 9780745671758, 978-0745671758
      ISBN10: 0745671756

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Long known as the world's factory, China is the largest manufacturing economy ever seen, accounting for more than 10% of global exports. China is also, of course, home to the largest workforce on the planet, the crucial element behind its staggering economic success.

      Trade Review
      "This book lucidly exposes the underside of the Chinese economic miracle, revealing the plight of the migrant laborers who are part of the world’s largest working class. Drawing on rich ethnographic data as well as careful political and economic analysis, Pun Ngai examines the conditions these workers face daily both on the job and in the dormitories. She also documents their recent radicalization and militancy, suggesting that, in China at least, working-class struggle is alive and well, contrary to popular belief. An authoritative overview that will be useful for students and general readers alike."
      Ruth Milkman, City University of New York

      "The re-making of the Chinese working class is one of the greatest stories of contemporary world history. With her well-grounded account of the struggles of migrant workers, Pun Ngai has given us a generous and insightful version of this vast transformation."
      Andrew Ross, New York University, author of Fast Boat to China: Lessons from Shanghai

      "In a series of engaged and engaging studies of China’s massive transformation, Pun Ngai exposes the despotic worlds of dormitory regimes, militarized factories, and subcontracted workers, creating a terrifying vision of an insurgent proletariat. Anyone interested in the future of planet Earth must take her findings into account."
      Michael Burawoy, University of California, Berkeley

      "Pun Ngai, one of the most cited scholars in this field, will again fascinate the readers with her recent book […]. Her book covers a topic that has received wide coverage, yet this work displays the vigour and passion of an activist scholar who used to complete her ethnography by working and living as a factory worker."
      Journal of Contemporary Asia


      ”Stepping away from Marx’s classical approach of capitalist production, Pun Ngai employs cultural class analysis through a theoretical lens by situating her research in the working labourers’ living experience. This methodology provides a vivid portrait of the working labour of China.”
      Asian Journal of Social Science

      Table of Contents
      • Introduction: What Is to Be Done with Philosophy?
      • Part One: A Generic Introduction
      • Chapter 1: Theory of the Philosophical Decision
      • Chapter 2: The Style of Non-Philosophy
      • Part Two: Unified Theories and the Waves of Non-Philosophy
      • Chapter 3: Politics, or a Democracy (of) Thought
      • Chapter 4: Science, or Philosophy’s Other
      • Chapter 5: Ethics, or Universalizing the Stranger-Subject
      • Chapter 6: Aesthetics, or Non-Philosophy as Philo-Fiction
      • Chapter 7: Religion, or a Rigorous Heresy
      • Conclusion: The Future of Non-Philosophy

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