In examining family relations in contemporary China the article reports the findings of an empirical investigation, which are discussed in terms of recent accounts in the specialist literature. While the individualization thesis suggests that the bonds between family members are diminishing and that family obligations are similarly less significant than they used to be, it is shown here that family bonds and obligations remain strong, even though the grounds on which they are performed and the attitudes and emotions associated with them have undergone change since China’s marketization from the 1980s. The individualization thesis neglects the process of reinterpretation and re-negotiation of filial obligation, and fails to appreciate that m...
This study explores the influence of familial and social factors on the matur-ing cohort of China’s ...
From civil war to Japanese occupation and communist revolution to market transition, China has under...
This paper examines how parent-child relationships vary against the backdrop of socioeconomic inequa...
This article applies the concept of intimacy to examine relationships between adult children and the...
This article explores the intertwining issues of filial obligation, material interest and emotional ...
Family obligation, which has an exceptionally high salience in traditional Chinese society, continue...
This article deploys narrative method to explore how young adults in China enrolled in higher educat...
Research on ageing in China has been preoccupied with the unsolved question of whether traditional f...
Filial obligation, a central concept in Confucianism describes how children should treat their paren...
My research focuses on the first generation of only-children and their parents, to see how the only...
China’s Revolutions and Intergenerational Relations counters the widely accepted notion that traditi...
This article examines the process in which urban families in China renegotiate intergenerational con...
In this paper, I investigate the change in the term of a family in the context of modern Chinese fam...
This study examines the changes of family life and relationships in urban China with reference to th...
For a generation in many sociological literatures, China has provided the example of traditional fam...
This study explores the influence of familial and social factors on the matur-ing cohort of China’s ...
From civil war to Japanese occupation and communist revolution to market transition, China has under...
This paper examines how parent-child relationships vary against the backdrop of socioeconomic inequa...
This article applies the concept of intimacy to examine relationships between adult children and the...
This article explores the intertwining issues of filial obligation, material interest and emotional ...
Family obligation, which has an exceptionally high salience in traditional Chinese society, continue...
This article deploys narrative method to explore how young adults in China enrolled in higher educat...
Research on ageing in China has been preoccupied with the unsolved question of whether traditional f...
Filial obligation, a central concept in Confucianism describes how children should treat their paren...
My research focuses on the first generation of only-children and their parents, to see how the only...
China’s Revolutions and Intergenerational Relations counters the widely accepted notion that traditi...
This article examines the process in which urban families in China renegotiate intergenerational con...
In this paper, I investigate the change in the term of a family in the context of modern Chinese fam...
This study examines the changes of family life and relationships in urban China with reference to th...
For a generation in many sociological literatures, China has provided the example of traditional fam...
This study explores the influence of familial and social factors on the matur-ing cohort of China’s ...
From civil war to Japanese occupation and communist revolution to market transition, China has under...
This paper examines how parent-child relationships vary against the backdrop of socioeconomic inequa...