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University of California Press
Open Access

The Funeral of Mr. Wang

Life, Death, and Ghosts in Urbanizing China

by Andrew B. Kipnis (Author)
Price: $12.99 / £10.99
Publication Date: Jul 2021
Edition: 1st Edition
Title Details:
Rights: World
Pages: 190
ISBN: 9780520381995
Trim Size: 6 x 9
Illustrations: 17 color photographs, 2 maps
Endowments:

About the Book

A free open access ebook is available upon publication. Learn more at www.luminosoa.org.

In rural China funerals are conducted locally, on village land by village elders. But in urban areas, people have neither land for burials nor elder relatives to conduct funerals. Chinese urbanization, which has increased drastically in recent decades, involves the creation of cemeteries, state-run funeral homes, and small private funerary businesses. The Funeral of Mr. Wang examines social change in urbanizing China through the lens of funerals, the funerary industry, and practices of memorialization. It analyzes changes in family life, patterns of urban sociality, transformations in economic relations, the politics of memorialization, and the echoes of these changes in beliefs about the dead and ghosts.
 

About the Author

Andrew B. Kipnis is Professor of Anthropology at The Chinese University of Hong Kong, coeditor of Hau: Journal of Ethnographic Theory, and author of From Village to City: Social Transformation in a Chinese County Seat.
 

Reviews

"This book is highly original and addresses a topic of central importance to understanding Chinese family life and the limits of a party-state’s regulatory power over the society and individual citizens. Original and systematic fieldwork is expertly used to illustrate core arguments. To my knowledge there is no competing ethnography."––Deborah Davis, Professor Emerita of Sociology, Yale University

The Funeral of Mr. Wang is a vivid portrait of how the transition from life to death is negotiated in the midst of a rapidly transforming urban Chinese society. Showing how death in contemporary China generates interconnected processes of cultural recombination among family members, funeral service providers, bureaucratic regulators, strangers, and ghosts, this book will be critical reading for all students of China and of death in contemporary societies."––David A. Palmer, coauthor of The Religious Question in Modern China