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Ten Thousand Things: Nurturing Life in Contemporary Beijing - MIT Press Book on Chinese Culture & Urban Studies | Perfect for Academics, Anthropologists & Beijing Enthusiasts
Ten Thousand Things: Nurturing Life in Contemporary Beijing - MIT Press Book on Chinese Culture & Urban Studies | Perfect for Academics, Anthropologists & Beijing Enthusiasts

Ten Thousand Things: Nurturing Life in Contemporary Beijing - MIT Press Book on Chinese Culture & Urban Studies | Perfect for Academics, Anthropologists & Beijing Enthusiasts

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Description

Ten Thousand Things explores the many forms of life, or, in ancient Chinese parlance “the ten thousand things” that life is and is becoming, in contemporary Beijing and beyond. Coauthored by an American anthropologist and a Chinese philosopher, the book examines the myriad ways contemporary residents of Beijing understand and nurture the good life, practice the embodied arts of everyday wellbeing, and in doing so draw on cultural resources ranging from ancient metaphysics to modern media.Farquhar and Zhang show that there are many activities that nurture life: practicing meditative martial arts among friends in a public park; jogging, swimming, and walking backward; dancing, singing, and keeping pet birds; connoisseurship of tea, wine, and food; and spiritual disciplines ranging from meditation to learning a foreign language. As ancient life-nurturing texts teach, the cultural practices that produce particular forms of life are generative in ten thousand ways: they “give birth to life and transform the transformations.”This book attends to the patterns of city life, listens to homely advice on how to live, and interprets the great tradition of medicine and metaphysics. In the process, a manifold culture of the urban Chinese everyday emerges. The lives nurtured, gathered, and witnessed here are global and local, embodied and discursive, ecological and cosmic, civic and individual. The elements of any particular life ― as long as it lasts, and with some skill and determination ― can be gathered, centered, and harmonized with the way things spontaneously go. The result, everyone says, is pleasure.

Reviews

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- Verified Buyer
I have just finished reading this splendidly descriptive collaboration between two outstanding academics: one American; the other Chinese. I can't recall finding any other work that addresses the urban landscape of this major world capital with such deft prose and insight. This is by no means a sterile, aloof scholarly account, although it certainly has moments of academic digression. It is a truly remarkable find for me as one who is now reflecting on my quarter century coming and going from Beijing and preparing to write a memoir about it. What transpires in this ethnographic study is a genuine, exceedingly well-informed and heartfelt dialogue between these authors and the reader. It exceeded my expectations in every respect and is well worth the price. Indeed, I recommend it over any other English print work when it comes to depicting the daily lives of Beijingers. Through both the close collaboration and the trained eye of these two observers, it avoids the pitfalls of a binary and Orientalist lens while remaining well aware of these traps. The translated interviews with the putongren and the interspersed references to other observers of urban social change in general and Beijing life in particular, are much appreciated. I applaud their efforts. Special Note: the book focuses mostly on the period from 2001 to 2008, which is a bit dated (i.e its population has doubled since then), however I can vouch for the fact that most of its observations are still quite relevant. Thematically, these authors have identified and promoted messages about how the reader can or should regard this once imperial and communist capital and its cultural and socio-political transformation in recent decades. This work amply sets the stage for squaring this capital with its current status as a megalopolis.
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