More Than “Peasants Without Land”: Individualisation and Identity Formation of Landless Peasants in the Process of China’s State-Led Rural Urbanisation

Q2 Social Sciences Journal of Current Chinese Affairs Pub Date : 2020-05-06 DOI:10.1177/1868102620915000
Isabel Heger
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引用次数: 7

Abstract

In the course of state-led rural urbanisation over the past few decades, millions of Chinese peasants have been expropriated and relocated. After establishing a definition of these “landless peasants” as a heterogeneous social group connected mainly by the fact that its members had to give up their land-use rights, this article sets out to examine subsequent processes of identity formation – a topic that has been largely neglected in existing research. Drawing on Beck’s individualisation thesis, I suggest that structural and institutional changes in the process of rural modernisation have initiated a further thrust of individualisation in people’s lives which manifests not only in the objective domain of life situations but also in the subjective domain of identity. This hypothesis is substantiated through an ethnographic case study based on seven months of fieldwork (2016–2018) in Huaming Model Town in the Dongli District of Tianjin. As a first step towards conceptualising what landless peasants are becoming, I will propose to start focusing on recombinant identities and class differentiations evolving among the people.
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超越“无地农民”:中国国家主导的农村城市化进程中失地农民的个体化与身份形成
在过去几十年国家主导的农村城市化进程中,数百万中国农民的土地被征用和重新安置。在将这些“无地农民”定义为一个主要由其成员不得不放弃土地使用权这一事实联系起来的异质社会群体之后,本文开始研究身份形成的后续过程——这一主题在现有研究中基本上被忽视了。根据贝克的个体化理论,我认为农村现代化过程中的结构性和制度性变化进一步推动了人们生活中的个体化,这不仅体现在生活情境的客观领域,也体现在身份的主观领域。通过对天津市东丽区华明示范镇为期7个月的田野调查(2016-2018),对民族志案例进行研究,证实了这一假设。作为概念化无地农民正在成为什么的第一步,我将建议开始关注重组身份和人民之间不断演变的阶级差异。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Current Chinese Affairs
Journal of Current Chinese Affairs Social Sciences-Political Science and International Relations
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
16
审稿时长
7 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Current Chinese Affairs is an internationally refereed academic journal published by the GIGA Institute of Asian Studies, Hamburg. The journal focuses on current developments in Greater China. It is simultaneously published (three times per year) online as an Open Access journal and as a printed version with a circulation of 1,000 copies, making it one of the world’s most widely read periodicals on Asian affairs. The Journal of Current Chinese Affairs, unlike some other Open Access publications, does not charge its authors any fee. The Journal of Current Chinese Affairs reaches a broad international readership in academia, administration and business circles. It is devoted to the transfer of scholarly insights to a wide audience. The journal is committed to publishing high-quality, original research on current issues in China in a format and style that is accessible across disciplines and to professionals with an interest in the region. The editors welcome contributions on current affairs within Greater China, including Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan. Submissions can focus on emerging topics and current developments as well as on future-oriented debates in the fields of China''s global and regional roles; political, economic and social developments including foreign affairs, business, finance, cultural industries, religion, education, science and technology; and so on.
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