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A Floating City of Peasants: The Great Migration in Contemporary China
 
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A Floating City of Peasants: The Great Migration in Contemporary China [Hardcover]

Floris-jan Van Luyn (Author), Jeannette K. Ringold (Translator)

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Book Description

February 1, 2008
A journalist's riveting, eyewitness account of the unprecedented movement of 120 million peasants from rural China to its cities, told from the migrants' point of view.

"Floris-Jan van Luyn brings China to life by listening to the people, whose voices would otherwise have gone unheard. Here are stories, not of high politics, but of life as it is led by most Chinese. This is reportage at its best."—Ian Buruma, author of Bad Elements: Chinese Rebels From Los Angeles To Beijing

The largest human migration in history is taking place in China today—incredibly, off the radar of the world's major media. Since the 1990s, at least 120 million Chinese peasants have left the countryside for big cities to work in factories, on construction sites, in catering and prostitution—typically without even the most basic rights or protections.

In A Floating City of Peasants, Floris-Jan van Luyn—who spent six years reporting from China for a daily newspaper—relates the remarkable tales of migrant workers who have helped fuel the explosive growth of the People's Republic. In a series of a dozen remarkably intimate portraits illuminated by wide-ranging reporting, we meet Xiao Li, a prostitute, who sends her little girl to the best school in Chongqing; Chunming who stole money from his parents to pay for the long trip to Beijing and found work on a garbage dump; Lüsong, who campaigned for a village school and against corrupt government employees and, as a result, was tortured almost to death; and others with equally gripping stories. Revealing the dark side of the Chinese economic miracle in words and striking pictures, this book documents an historic turning point in the life of the modern world.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Internal migration in China has reached epic proportions as the masses are exchanging the countryside for the city. Through 12 individual profiles, Dutch journalist van Luyn fleshes out the lives of these migrants, notably from their point of view. The peasant class in China lacks many basic rights, but van Luyn is careful not to make victims of his subjects. Instead, he provides well-rounded portraits of prostitutes, garbage collectors and factory workers, offering insight into their notions of sacrifice and progress. Van Luyn shows both sides of this migration, the peasants who stay and continue to live in ways that have been uninterrupted for decades and the ones who go to factory cities. For the most part, these stories reveal the people who put together coats, computers and other goods that find their way across the globe to propel China's explosive growth in the world economy. Photos of children playing in medical waste and men whose baths are contingent upon collecting sufficient rainwater enhance these portraits of daily privations. Though the personal narratives do much to explicate the push-and-pull factors affecting migration today, hard evidence in the form of statistics and socioeconomic analyses would have helped ground these stories in a larger social trend. B&w photos. (Feb.)Correction: In A Chant to Soothe Wild Elephants (Reviews, Dec. 10.), author Jaed Coffin travels to his mother's hometown in Thailand, not Taiwan.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

About the Author

From 1995 to 2001, Floris-Jan van Luyn was the China correspondent for the Dutch daily newspaper NRC Handelsblad. He studied history and Chinese in Leiden, Taipei, and Beijing before becoming a journalist and a filmmaker. He lives in The Hague, Netherlands.

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