Description
Book SynopsisYeh examines how Chinese development projects in Tibet served to consolidate state space and power.
Trade ReviewIn Taming Tibet, Emily Yeh offers a new twist to current paradigms of Chinese development, presenting a trove of new evidence from China's politically unstable western periphery. Drawing on 16 months of intensive fieldwork undertaken between 2000 and 2009, Yeh traces the devastating effects of China's recent state-subsidized and state-led land development campaign in Lhasa and its peri-urban regions.... Yeh's fieldwork, coming during a period of rapid transformation in China's land regime, provides a valuable counterpoint to a development literature that has focused for decades on China's coastal regions to the neglect of its hinterland.
-- Julia Chuang * The Journal of Peasant Studies *
In her masterful new book, Taming Tibet, Emily Yeh discusses the gift of development in modern Lhasa in a critical fashion, providing an excellent and informative examination of Chinese development projects over the last sixty plus years.... It will be of use to scholars from a variety of fields including ethnicity in China, development studies, and geography, and is also a welcome addition to the Tibetological field.
-- Timothy Thurston * Asian Ethnology *
This is an important and authoritative analysis of contemporary socio-economics and politics in Tibet and does require some understanding of the academic discipline involved. However, the technical jargon is offset to a great extent by the numerous first-hand accounts of the author's time in and around Lhasa, which are invariably insightful, often entertaining, and help to bring a touch of light relief to what is essentially a dark and sombre subject.
-- Wendy Palace * Asian Affairs *
Table of ContentsPreface
Note on Transliterations and Place Names
Abbreviations and Terms
Introduction
A Celebration
1. State Space: Power, Fear, and the State of Exception
Hearing and Forgetting
Part I. Soil
The Aftermath of 2008 (I)
2. Cultivating Control: Nature, Gender, and Memories of Labor in State Incorporation
Part II. Plastic
Lhasa Humor
3. Vectors of Development: Migrants and the Making of "Little Sichuan"
Signs of Lhasa
4. The Micropolitics of Marginalization
Science and Technology Transfer Day
5. Indolence and the Cultural Politics of Development
Part III. Concrete
Michael Jackson as Lhasa
6. "Build a Civilized City": Making Lhasa Urban
The Aftermath of 2008 (II)
7. Engineering Indebtedness and Image: Comfortable Housing and the New Socialist Countryside
Conclusion
Afterword: Fire
References
Notes
Index