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"Jun Jing's edited volume is an important step forward on a controversial subject--only children in China's one-child families--that has often generated more heat than light. . . . There are no weak chapters. . . . [James L.] Watson is correct in concluding that the book may be unique because it attempts to track a profound historical transformation in social attitudes toward children during the early stages of that transformation."--Pacific Affairs "A rich description of cultural and dietary change in action, pointing to possibilities in research as well as the future of health studies in China."--Nutritional Anthropology…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
"Jun Jing's edited volume is an important step forward on a controversial subject--only children in China's one-child families--that has often generated more heat than light. . . . There are no weak chapters. . . . [James L.] Watson is correct in concluding that the book may be unique because it attempts to track a profound historical transformation in social attitudes toward children during the early stages of that transformation."--Pacific Affairs "A rich description of cultural and dietary change in action, pointing to possibilities in research as well as the future of health studies in China."--Nutritional Anthropology
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Autorenporträt
Jun Jing is Assistant Professor of Social Anthropology at the City University of New York. He is the author of The Temple of Memories: History, Power, and Morality in a Chinese Village (Stanford, 1996).