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008 151016s2014||||enk s ||1 0|eng|d
020 _a9781139839228
_qelectronic book
039 9 _a201606081103
_basmany
_c201605251156
_dbaiti
_c201605251155
_dbaiti
_y10-16-2015
_zhafiz
_wUPO_10044530-hafizupload16102015.mrc
_x90
040 _aUkCbUP
_cUkCbUP
_erda
090 _aebook
090 _aebookJC599.C6
_bC6 2014
100 1 _aCi, Jiwei,
_eauthor.
245 1 0 _aMoral China in the Age of Reform /
_cJiwei Ci.
264 1 _aCambridge :
_bCambridge University Press,
_c2014.
300 _a1 online resource (244 pages) :
_bdigital, PDF file(s).
336 _atext
_2rdacontent
337 _acomputer
_2rdamedia
338 _aonline resource
_2rdacarrier
500 _aTitle from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 08 Oct 2015).
520 _aThree decades of dizzying change in China's economy and society have left a tangible record of successes and failures. Less readily accessible but of no less consequence is the story, as illuminated in this book, of what China's reform has done to its people as moral and spiritual beings. Jiwei Ci examines the moral crisis in post-Mao China as a mirror of deep contradictions in the new self as well as in society. He seeks to show that lack of freedom, understood as the moral and political conditions for subjectivity under modern conditions of life, lies at the root of these contradictions, just as enhanced freedom offers the only appropriate escape from them. Rather than a ready-made answer, however, freedom is treated throughout as a pressing question in China's search for a better moral and political culture.
773 0 _tCambridge Books Online
776 0 8 _iPrint version:
_z9781107038660
856 4 0 _a
_uhttps://eresourcesptsl.ukm.remotexs.co/user/login?url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/CBO9781139839228
907 _a.b16220316
_b2022-10-03
_c2019-11-12
942 _c01
_n0
_kebook
914 _avtls003594698
998 _ae
_b2015-03-10
_cm
_dz
_feng
_genk
_y0
_z.b16220316
999 _c599734
_d599734