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Table of Content

    01 March 2015, Volume 1 Issue 1
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    Editor’s Comments
    Yu Xie
    2015, 1(1):  3-5.  doi:10.1177/2057150X14568770
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    Towards a professional sociology on China
    Xiaogang Wu
    2015, 1(1):  6-14.  doi:10.1177/2057150X14568772
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    This article identifies two internal tensions that Chinese sociology has constantly encountered since the discipline was reestablished in 1979: public versus professional and indigenization versus internationalization. I argue that professionalization is a necessary and crucial step to achieving unity in the study of social changes in contemporary China and to contributing to general knowledge in the discipline of sociology.
    Diverging fortunes: The evolution of gender wage gaps for singles, couples, and parents in China, 1989–2009
    Yuping Zhang and Emily Hannum
    2015, 1(1):  15-55.  doi:10.1177/2057150X14568769
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    Since the 1980s, social scientists working in China have raised questions about whether market transition could harm the relative position of women in the workplace. However, little work has been done to investigate this possibility with longitudinal data that includes both urban and rural populations and covers recent years, or linked gender gaps in income explicitly to the retreat of the State sector. Moreover, most research has not considered the real possibility that trends in gender disparities might diverge depending on the family status of women, though studies in China, as elsewhere, suggest the existence of both employment and wage penalties for motherhood. Guided by feminist theories which emphasize that gender inequality should be examined at the intersections of different social institutions, we consider whether gender wage gap trends differ for single people, compared to married people and parents. Further, given the role posited for market transition in shaping emerging gender gaps, we ask whether changes in gaps can be linked to the shift away from socialist institutions to privatized workplaces. We use multi-province panel data spanning the years 1989 to 2009 to estimate generalized estimating equation (GEE) models of earnings that account for multiple observations within the same individual and correct for potential bias associated with selection into the work force for women. The results show clear evidence of deterioration in income for women relative to men, and also suggest a link between the retreat of the State sector and a wider gender gap. However, the trend diverges by family status. Single women rival, and even outpace, single men in wages by the late 2000s, while mothers are increasingly disadvantaged in
    income.
    Between heaven and earth: Dual accountability in Han China
    Miranda Brown and Yu Xie
    2015, 1(1):  56-87.  doi:10.1177/2057150X14568768
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    Scholars have noticed that centrally-appointed officials in imperial China were not only beholden to their superiors but also acted as brokers of local interests.We characterize such a structural position as ‘dual accountability’. Although accountability to superiors is readily understandable within the Weberian framework of bureaucratic hierarchy, the reasons behind local responsiveness bear explanation. This paper attempts to explain such responsiveness by investigating the larger ideological, structural, and institutional contexts of the Han dynasty (206 BCE–220 CE). We explore two existing explanations – practical necessity and ‘Confucian’ or classical paternalism – and add a new explanation of our own: the emphasis on virtuous reputations in the system of bureaucratic recruitment and promotion. Our argument is supported by empirical evidence from a range of sources, including administrative records and inscriptions on ancient stelae. More generally, we question Weber’s hypothesis that the Chinese imperial system of administration fit the ideal type of traditional bureaucracy, and we examine the rational bases underlying an ‘inefficient’ system that was in place for two millennia.
    Inequality in children’s well-being and development: Evidence from a national panel study
    Hongwei Xu, Airan Liu and Yueyun Zhang
    2015, 1(1):  88-107.  doi:10.1177/2057150X14568767
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    China’s rapid socio-economic and demographic changes have raised concerns about growing socio-economic inequalities in children’s well-being. Drawing on the data from the 2010 and 2012 waves of the China Family Panel Studies (CFPS), this study systematically examines the socio-economic inequalities in children’s objective and subjective well-being as well as differentials in children’s growth trajectories. We find strong evidence of persistent urban advantage in an array of child development indicators, despite the overall economic boom since the beginning of the reform era. However, we also find that children from families of low socio-economic status (SES) attained certain noncognitive advantages relative to those from better-off families, which may help offset certain negative impacts of low SES. Furthermore, the experience of rural-to-urban migration appears to be beneficial to rural-origin children as their exposure to a novel urban environment likely raises their educational aspiration, among other measures, which in turn is related to increased educational investment.
    The paradoxes of solidarity: Cultural trauma and collective identity in Mao’s China
    Rui Gao
    2015, 1(1):  108-135.  doi:10.1177/2057150X14568771
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    The millions of Chinese people who had the misfortune of living through the War of Resistance Against Japan (hereinafter ‘the War’) experienced nearly unbearable trauma and pain. Such vivid and massively shared suffering and injustice, however, remained ultimately private and individual. For many years after the building of the People’s Republic of China, this suffering seldom found its way into the public sphere of expression. A chief goal of this paper is to delve into this curious phenomenon – namely, the ‘absence’ of a collective trauma of the War despite the human suffering – and seek to explain it from a cultural sociological point of view. To this end, the theory of cultural trauma is used and the relationship between various cultural structures in the process of trauma formation is explored. The absence of the trauma of the War should not be understood merely as a consequence of political necessity, but should be contextualized and comprehended within the web of meanings woven by powerful cultural structures that predominated in the public sphere at the time. The paper sets out two principal tasks:. first, the successful construction in Mao’s era of a class trauma that sought to form a new collectivity is traced; and, second, how the experience of the War fits or, rather,
    ‘unfits’ with this grand narrative of ‘class trauma’ is examined. Tracing representation of theWar in the public sphere around the time, it is argued that the emergence of theWar as a collective trauma was effectively ‘inhibited’ by the trauma of class struggle.
    Refashioning sociological imagination: Linguality, visuality and the iconic turn in cultural sociology
    Dominik Bartmanski
    2015, 1(1):  136-161.  doi:10.1177/2057150X15570536
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    One of the key challenges of meaning-centred cultural sociology is facing the findings of contemporary anthropology, archaeology, art history and material culture studies. Specifically, the increasingly pressing task is to recognize the sociological limitations of the semiotic framework laid bare by those disciplines. The traditional structuralist focus on discursive codes and the assumption of arbitrariness of cultural sign is of limited service in understanding the power of complex representational economies and especially in the task of explaining its variability. The language- and communication-centred framework downplays the fact that many signifiers credited with causal social power are inescapably embedded in open-ended but not arbitrary patterns of material signification. There is ample evidence delivered by the recent studies within the aforementioned fields that such signifiers are ‘not just the garb of meaning’, to use the insightful phrase of Webb Keane. Rather, the significatory patterns and their material and sensuous entanglements co-constitute meanings that inform social action. Therefore, more integrative and multidimensional models of culture in action are needed. Some specific explanatory models have been explicitly formulated by a series of intertwined conceptual ‘turns’ in human sciences: material, performative, spatial and iconic, among others. By showing that meanings are always embedded in and
    enacted by the concrete assemblages of materiality and corporeality, they enable sociologists to transcend the linguistic bias of classical structuralist hermeneutics. This paper discusses the importance of iconicity for developing such an integrative perspective without abandoning some constitutive insights of the linguistic turn. I focus on the transformative works of contemporary scholars like Daniel Miller, Webb Keane, Ian Hodder, and Jeffrey Alexander, as well as on my own research, to illustrate the implications of the aforementioned paradigmatic ‘turns’. In particular, I aim at elaborating a key principle of material culture studies: different orders of semiosis are differently subject to determination and/or autonomous logic of the cultural text. As a result, differently structured signifiers are responsive to distinct modes of ‘social construction’ and historical transformation. We need to keep paying attention to the Austinian question of how to do things with words, but we cannot keep doing it as if things social were at the same time not done with images, objects, places, and bodies and all that their specific character and use imply. Fleshing out the so-expanded sociological imagination helps us to activate the full potential of understanding and explanation that the concept of culture possesses, and thus, to decisively turn culture on.