KSCB713 Contemporary Chinese Society: Celebs, Sport, Drugs, and Sex for Mgr. program

Filozofická fakulta
jaro 2020

Předmět se v období jaro 2020 nevypisuje.

Rozsah
1/1/0. 5 kr. Ukončení: k.
Vyučující
Prof. Jonathan Sullivan (přednášející), Mgr. Bc. Denisa Hilbertová, M.A. (zástupce)
Garance
doc. Lucie Olivová, MA, Ph.D., DSc.
Seminář čínských studií – Centrum asijských studií – Filozofická fakulta
Kontaktní osoba: Mgr. et Mgr. Dušan Vávra, Ph.D.
Dodavatelské pracoviště: Seminář čínských studií – Centrum asijských studií – Filozofická fakulta
Předpoklady
TYP_STUDIA ( N ) && ! KSCB160 Contemporary Chinese Society
Omezení zápisu do předmětu
Předmět je nabízen i studentům mimo mateřské obory.
Mateřské obory/plány
Cíle předmětu
The course explores how the transition to market socialism and partial retreat of the state have created a freer, more individualistic and wealthier society, but also one in which the decline of socialist ideology and collectivist ways of life and previous certainties in the organization of life have affected attitudes and behaviours. The course will establish the socio-political parameters in which social expression and lifestyles are experienced, survey key processes such as urbanization and migration, and introduce concepts such as “liquid modernity” to help explain people’s responses. The course explores the following features of contemporary Chinese society: Chinese millenials; internet and gaming; celebrity industry; LGBTQ, gender and feminism; sex; music; drugs; football fans.
Osnova
  • Lecture 1 Contemporary Chinese society
  • Lecture 2 China’s Millennials
  • Lecture 3 Consumption
  • Lecture 4 Internet and Gaming
  • Lecture 5 Celebrity industry
  • Lecture 6 Celebrity culture & fandoms
  • Lecture 7 LGBTQ, gender and feminism
  • Lecture 8 Sex
  • Lecture 9 Underground music
  • Lecture 10 Drugs and gangs
  • Lecture 11 Football ultras
  • More detailed syllabus is available in IS (study material).
Literatura
  • Liu, Chen. 2014. “Noise in Guangzhou: The Cultural Politics of Underground Popular Music in Contemporary Guangzhou.” Area 46(3), 228 -234.
  • Wallis, Cara. "New media practices in China: Youth patterns, processes, and politics." International Journal of Communication 5 (2011): 31.
  • Li, Siling. 2009. "The turn to the self: From “big character posters” to YouTube videos." Chinese Journal of Communication 2(1), 50-60.
  • Chin, Kolin, and Roy Godson. "Organized crime and the political-criminal nexus in China." Trends in Organized Crime 9.3 (2006): 5.
  • Edwards, Louise, and Elaine Jeffreys. 2010. Celebrity in China. Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press
  • Nie, Hongping Annie. "Gaming, Nationalism, and Ideological Work in Contemporary China: online games based on the War of Resistance against Japan." Journal of Contemporary China 22.81 (2013): 499-517.
  • Moore, Robert L. "Generation ku: Individualism and China's millennial youth." Ethnology (2005): 357-376.
  • Gong, Yuan. "Online discourse of masculinities in transnational football fandom: Chinese Arsenal fans’ talk around ‘gaofushuai’and ‘diaosi’." Discourse & Society 27.1 (2016): 20-37.
  • Han Han, This Generation. (Schuster, 2012).
  • De Kloet, Jeroen. 2010. China with a Cut: Globalization, Urban Youth and Popular Music. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press.
  • Dong, Jinxia, and J. A. Mangan. "Football in the new China: Political statement, entrepreneurial enticement and patriotic passion." Soccer and Society 2.3 (2001): 79-100.
  • Chen, An. "Secret societies and organized crime in contemporary China." Modern Asian Studies 39.1 (2005): 77-107.
  • Evans, Harriet. 2008. Sexed Bodies, Sexualized Identities, and the Limits of Gender. China Information 22(2), 361-386.
  • Jeffreys, Elaine and Haiqing Yu. 2015. Sex in China. Cambridge: Polity Press.
  • Fish, Eric. China's Millennials: The Want Generation. Rowman & Littlefield, 2015.
  • Tan, Jia. 2017. “Digital masquerading: Feminist media activism in China.” Crime, Media, Culture 13(2), 171 -186.
  • Yu, LiAnne. Consumption in China: How China's new consumer ideology is shaping the nation. John Wiley & Sons, 2014.
  • Engrebretsen, Elisabeth L. and William F. Schroder (eds.) (with Hongwei Bao). 2015. Queer/Tongzhi China: New Perspectives on Research, Activism and Media Cultures. Copenhagen: NIAS Press.
  • JACKA, Tamara, Andrew B. KIPNIS a Sally SARGESON. Contemporary China : society and social change. 1st pub. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2013, xii, 311. ISBN 9781107011847. info
  • Online society in China : creating, celebrating, and instrumentalising the online carnival. Edited by David Kurt Herold - Peter Marolt. London: Routledge, 2011, xi, 216. ISBN 9780203828519. info
  • FONG, Vanessa L. Only hope : coming of age under China's one-child policy. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press, 2004, x, 242. ISBN 9780804753302. info
  • TURNER, Graeme. Understanding celebrity. 1st pub. London: Sage Publications, 2004, vi, 148. ISBN 0761941673. info
Výukové metody
Lectures, class presentations, class discussions.
Metody hodnocení
1) No absence allowed.
2) Final test.
3) Final essay.
Vyučovací jazyk
Angličtina
Informace učitele
CLASS SCHEDULE (2019):

Mon April 15: 14.00-19.50, B2.23
Tue April 16: 12.00-13.50, N41; 16.00-17.50, B2.34
Wed April 17: 12.00-13.50, B2.44; 16.00-19.50, B2.42
Thu April 18: 12.00-13.50, B2.44; 14.00-15.50, B2.34
Další komentáře
Výuka probíhá blokově.
Poznámka k četnosti výuky: Kurz proběhne intenzivně v týdnu 15.-18. 4. 2019. Rozvrh je uveden níže.
Předmět je zařazen také v obdobích jaro 2018, jaro 2019.