Guijing migrant village

    Research output: Creative WorksTextual Works

    Abstract

    In Transit Labour: Circuits, Regions, Borders. No. 2 (Dec. 2010). Borders are no longer only geographical lines or filters between states. Rather than existing solely at territory's edge, they have emerged as mobile control technologies strung across the world's infrastructures, circuits, cities and bodies. In China one of the most important borders is that between the urban and the rural. The movement of people between these spaces is deeply shaping Chinese society and its interactions with the state. Events such as the Shanghai Expo 2010 offer a hypermodern and green vision of the city. The migrant villages that have sprung up on the fringes of China's metropolises present a very different image: bleak, polluted and poor. These villages are sites of multiple borders, where the subjectivity of migrants is produced at the interface with governmental, nongovernmental and commercial actors.
    Original languageEnglish
    Place of PublicationPenrith South, N.S.W.
    PublisherCentre for Cultural Research, University of Western Sydney
    Size6 pages
    Publication statusPublished - 2010

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