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In this path-breaking book, Tong Lam examines the emergence of the "culture of fact" in modern China, showing how elites and intellectuals sought to transform the dynastic empire into a nation-state, thereby ensuring its survival. Lam argues that an epistemological break away from traditional modes of understanding the observable world began around the turn of the twentieth century. Tracing the Neo-Confucian school of evidentiary research and the modern departure from it, Lam shows how, through the rise of the social survey, "the fact" became a basic conceptual medium and source of truth. In focusing on China's social survey movement, A Passion for Facts analyzes how information generated by a range of research practices-census, sociological investigation, and ethnography-was mobilized by competing political factions to imagine, manage, and remake the nation.
Social surveys --- Community surveys --- Surveys, Social --- Social sciences --- Surveys --- History --- Research --- China --- Social policy. --- Social conditions --- 20th century china. --- asia pacific modern. --- asian culture. --- asian history. --- asian politics. --- asian studies. --- chinese dynasty. --- chinese education. --- chinese empire. --- chinese ethnography. --- chinese history. --- chinese imperialism. --- chinese intellectuals. --- chinese politics. --- chinese society. --- chinese tradition. --- confucian school. --- east asian science. --- eastern asia. --- evolution of china. --- global colonialism. --- global social science. --- modern china. --- neo-confucian school. --- schools of thought. --- social sciences research. --- world history books.
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Since the fall of the Iron Curtain, formerly socialist countries have gone through manifold transformations, whilst remnants of socialism remain ubiquitous. The volume explores various spaces of the postsocialist landscape, presenting a mixture of real and imaginary spaces, of memory and nostalgia, of aesthetic and political symbolism, of the global East and the global South, of academic and essayistic writing. It casts a glance at the heterogeneous relics of socialism and their transformation in very different parts of the world. From the description of (post-)socialist interiors, façades, neighborhoods, parks, monuments, and objects towards the imaginary spaces of literature, the contributors describe the concreteness and intimacy of some of the places that span across and even beyond of what is left of the »second world« today.
(Post-)Socialism; Urban Studies; Literature; East European Studies; Hybrid Spatialities; Memory Culture; Space; Society; Cultural Studies --- Cultural Studies. --- East European Studies. --- Hybrid Spatialities. --- Literature. --- Memory Culture. --- Society. --- Space. --- Urban Studies. --- 2000-2099 --- Former communist countries.
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