Description
Book SynopsisSebastian Veg explores the rise of
minjian—unofficial, unaffiliated, and among the people—intellectuals and how they have profoundly transformed China’s public culture.
Minjian documents how, amid deep structural shifts, grassroots thinker-activists began to work outside academia or policy institutions in an embryonic public sphere.
Trade ReviewA
tour de force and an excellent contribution to an important field. -- David Ownby * The PRC History Review *
Veg thoughtfully situates these “grassroots intellectuals” in a social history of Chinese thinkers. * Foreign Affairs *
The first fully rounded description of the creation of this new class of thinkers, artists, and filmmakers. * New York Review of Books *
The book is a timely addition to the growing body of scholarship on intellectuals and intellectual discourse in contemporary China. * Modern Chinese Literature and Culture *
[Veg] does nothing less than challenge the reader to reconsider who are and how we understand 'intellectuals' in China. -- Timothy Cheek * China Quarterly *
Published at a moment when the Chinese government is making increasingly muscular efforts to limit free speech, Veg’s timely and engaging study examines the ways in which Chinese “grassroots intellectuals” use a variety of different media and platforms to comment critically on sociopolitical conditions in contemporary China. -- Carlos Rojas, Duke University
Minjian offers a comprehensive study of new types of intellectuals in the age of digital media. Ranging from independent filmmakers and historians to lawyers and journalists, these grassroots intellectuals have transformed public culture and the meaning of being intellectuals in China. Veg tells captivating stories of feisty individuals in the context of broader historical change. An important contribution to China studies and an excellent resource for teaching. -- Guobin Yang, University of Pennsylvania
At a time of deepening authoritarianism in China and beyond, this book provides important insights into civic resilience in the shadows of a repressive system. The author is uniquely placed to show how independent and critical
minjian intellectuals, working in a variety of roles and settings, have resisted control by the system, thereby challenging the Party’s claim to power. -- Eva Pils, King’s College London
Sometimes to the distress of its leaders, China has developed an active sphere of intellectual creativity and political discussion outside the control of the Communist Party. Though unofficial this has considerable influence. Western observers tend to see only fragments. Sebastian Veg provides a major service by offering this overview, with individual biographies and a helpful analysis. -- Craig Calhoun, Arizona State University
Chinese intellectuals used to focus on the state and “take responsibility for all under heaven.” But commercialization and a government impervious to moral approbation have given rise to a new generation of intellectuals who focus more on the concrete problems of society and distance themselves from the concerns of the state. It is this remarkable change in the ideas and status of intellectuals that Sebastian Veg dissects with such precision in this carefully researched and wonderfully written book. -- Joseph Fewsmith, Boston University
Absolutely indispensable to any student of Chinese politics, society, or contemporary history, a must-read for scholars and students alike. * China Review *
[This book] is researched in detail, argued convincingly, and demonstrates a great deal of sympathy for the intellectuals it studies. -- Rogier Creemers * China Journal *
Deeply researched and consistently thought-provoking. * Common Knowledge *
Table of ContentsAcknowledgments
Introduction
1. Grassroots Intellectuals: Theoretical and Historical Perspectives
2. Wang Xiaobo and the Silent Majority: Redefining the Role of Intellectuals After Tiananmen
3.
Minjian Historians of the Mao Era: Commemorating, Documenting, Debating
4. Investigating and Transforming Society from the Margins: The Rise and Fall of Independent Cinema
5. Professionals at the Grassroots: Rights Lawyers, Academics, and Petitioners
6. Journalists, Bloggers, and a New Public Culture
Conclusion
Appendix: Minibiographies of Thirty
Minjian Intellectuals
Notes
Index