Can Science and Technology Save China? - by Susan Greenhalgh & Li Zhang (Paperback)
About this item
Highlights
- Can Science and Technology Save China?
- About the Author: Susan Greenhalgh is the John King and Wilma Cannon Fairbank Research Professor of Chinese Society in the department of Anthropology at Harvard University.
- 240 Pages
- Business + Money Management, Development
Description
About the Book
"This study of the intimate connections between science and society in China [posits] that science and technology, far from saving China--as the country's leaders promise--are producing unanticipated, often deeply disturbing effects"--Book Synopsis
Can Science and Technology Save China? assesses the intimate connections between science and society in China, offering an in-depth look at how an array of sciences and technologies are being made, how they are interfacing with society, and with what effects.
Focusing on critical domains of daily life, the chapters explore how scientists, technicians, surgeons, therapists, and other experts create practical knowledges and innovations, as well as how ordinary people take them up as they pursue the good life. Editors Greenhalgh and Zhang offer a rare, up-close view of the politics of Chinese science-making, showing how everyday logics, practices, and ethics of science, medicine, and technology are profoundly reshaping contemporary China. By foregrounding the notion of "governing through science," and the contested role of science and technology as instruments of change, this timely book addresses important questions regarding what counts as science in China, what science and technology can do to transform China, as well as their limits and unintended consequences.
Review Quotes
This is a prescient and impressively coherent collection of essays based on a workshop held at Harvard University in. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork, the contributors--all but one of whom are anthropologists--address crucial questions about the relationship between science and the party-state, broader issues of governmentality, as well as China's status as a (bio)tech superpower.
-- "China Review International"About the Author
Susan Greenhalgh is the John King and Wilma Cannon Fairbank Research Professor of Chinese Society in the department of Anthropology at Harvard University.
Li Zhang is Professor of Anthropology at the University of California-Davis.