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The Art of Useless

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The Art of Useless offers an innovative way to understand China’s political-economic, social, and cultural transformations, showing how consumer culture helps anticipate, produce, and shape a new m...
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  • 21 September 2021
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Since embarking on economic reforms in 1978, the People’s Republic of China has also undergone a sweeping cultural reorganization, from proletarian culture under Mao to middle-class consumer culture today. Under these circumstances, how has a Chinese middle class come into being, and how has consumerism become the dominant ideology of an avowedly socialist country? The Art of Useless offers an innovative way to understand China’s unprecedented political-economic, social, and cultural transformations, showing how consumer culture helps anticipate, produce, and shape a new middle-class subjectivity.

Examining changing representations of the production and consumption of fashion in documentaries and films, Calvin Hui traces how culture contributes to China’s changing social relations through the cultivation of new identities and sensibilities. He explores the commodity chain of fashion on a transnational scale, from production to consumption to disposal, as well as media portrayals of the intersections of clothing with class, gender, and ethnicity. Hui illuminates key cinematic narratives, such as a factory worker’s desire for a high-quality suit in the 1960s, an intellectual’s longing for fashionable clothes in the 1980s, and a white-collar woman’s craving for brand-name commodities in the 2000s. He considers how documentary films depict the undersides of consumption—exploited laborers who fantasize about the products they manufacture as well as the accumulation of waste and its disposal—revealing how global capitalism renders migrant factory workers, scavengers, and garbage invisible.

A highly interdisciplinary work that combines theoretical nuance with masterful close analyses, The Art of Useless is an innovative rethinking of the emergence of China’s middle-class consumer culture.

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Price: $35.00
Pages: 280
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Imprint: Columbia University Press
Series: Global Chinese Culture
Publication Date: 21 September 2021
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780231192491
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

SOCIAL SCIENCE / Media Studies, HISTORY / Modern / 20th Century / General, HISTORY / Asia / China, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Cultural & Ethnic Studies / Asian Studies, BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Consumer Behavior

A sophisticated analysis that is ambitious in its historical and textual scope.

Calvin Hui is Class of 1952 Associate Professor of Chinese Studies at the College of William and Mary in the United States.

Acknowledgments
Introduction: The Trouble with Naming: Middle-Class Culture, Petty-Bourgeois Sensibility, and Zhuang (裝)
1. Dirty Fashion: Ma Ke’s Fashion Exhibit Useless (2007), Jia Zhangke’s Documentary Film Useless (2007), and Cognitive Mapping
2. The High-Quality Suit, Class Struggle, and Cultural Revolution: The Politics of Consumption in Xie Tieli’s Film Never Forget (1964)
3. “Mao’s Children Are Wearing Fashion!” Romantic Love, Fashion Consumption, and Modernization Politics in Huang Zumo’s Film Romance on Lu Mountain (1980)
4. Imag(in)ing the Chinese Middle-Class Culture: White-Collar Work, Romantic Love, and Fashion Consumption
5. Between Production and Consumption: Chinese Migrant Factory Workers in Documentary Films and Ethnographic Works
6. The Psychic Life of Rubbish: On Wang Jiuliang’s Documentary Film Beijing Besieged by Waste (2010)
Notes
Works Cited
Index