Contents
Introduction: A Gathering Storm or a New Chapter?
Part One. Rhetorical Histories, Contested Nationalities, and Emerging Transcultures
Preface to Part One, by Leonard C. Hawes
The Little Red Book Lives On: Mao’s Rhetorical Legacies in Contemporary Chinese Imaginings, by Xing Lu
Chen Guangcheng and the Rhetorical Politics of Dissent: Imagining Human Rights in U.S.–Sino Relations, by Michelle Murray Yang
Alternative Modernities, Postcolonial Colonialism, and Contested Imaginings in and of Tibet, by Stephen J. Hartnett
Imagining China in Twelve Vignettes, photographs by Jeremy Make, captions by Stephen J. Hartnett
Part Two. Imagining Communities in the Age of Risk
Preface to Part Two, by Mohan J. Dutta
China’s Fraught Food System: Imagining Ecological Civilization in the Face of Paradoxical Modernity, by Donovan Conley
Her Milk Is Inferior: Breastfeeding, Risk, and Imagining Maternal Identities in Chinese Cyberspace, by Zhuo Ban
Imagining Health Risks: Fear, Fate, Death, and Family in Chinese and American HIV/AIDS Online Discussion Forums, by Huiling Ding and Jingwen Zhang
Imagining the People’s Risk: Projecting National Strength in China’s English-Language News about Avian Influenza, by Lisa B. Keränen, Kirsten N. Lindholm, and Jared Woolly
Part Three. Representations, Imaginations, and the Politics of Culture
Preface to Part Three, by Kent A. Ono
Imagining Dissent: Contesting the Facade of Harmony through Art and the Internet in China, by Patrick Shaou-Whea Dodge
Imagining China through the Culture Industries: The 798 Art Zone and New Chinas, by Elizabeth Brunner
A Beijing Wolf in Hong Kong: Lufsig and Imagining Communities of Political Resistance to Chinese Unification, by David R. Gruber
Conclusion: Imagining China and the Rhetorical Work of Interpretation
Acknowledgments
About the Contributors
Index