The political economy of affect and emotion in East Asia /
General Material Designation
[Book]
First Statement of Responsibility
[edited by] Jie Yang
PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
Specific Material Designation and Extent of Item
xxiii, 247 pages ;
Dimensions
24 cm
SERIES
Series Title
Asia's transformations ;
Volume Designation
42
INTERNAL BIBLIOGRAPHIES/INDEXES NOTE
Text of Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
CONTENTS NOTE
Text of Note
Contents note continued: 7."Affective foreigners save our elder citizens": gender, affective labor and biopolitics in Japan / Ayaka Yoshimizu -- 8.Fulfilling the self and transnational intimacy through emotional labor: the experiences of migrant Filipino domestic workers in South Korea / Toshiko Tsujimoto -- pt. VI Affect, modernity and empires -- 9.Affective attachments to Japanese Women's language: language, gender and emotion in colonialism / Momoko Nakamura -- 10.The politics of haan: affect and the domestication of anger in South Korea / Sung Kil Min -- 11.Familial communism and cartoons: an affective political economy of North Korea / Craig Mackie
Text of Note
Machine generated contents note: pt. I Introduction -- The politics of affect and emotion: imagination, potentiality and anticipation in East Asia / Jie Yang -- pt. II Happiness and psychologization -- 1.Crafting Confucian remedies for happiness in contemporary China: unraveling the Yu Dan phenomenon / Yanhua Zhang -- 2.The happiness of the marginalized: affect, counseling and self-reflexivity in China / Jie Yang -- pt. III Body, affect and subjectivity -- 3.Banking in affects: the child, a landscape and the performance of a canonical view / Teresa Kuan -- 4.Hospitality and detachment: Japanese tour guides' affective labor in Canada / Shiho Satsuka -- pt. IV Tears, media and affective articulation -- 5.Tears, capital, ethics: television and the public sphere in Japan / Daniel White -- 6.Melodrama for change: gender, kuqing xi and the affective articulation of Chinese TV drama / Shuyu Kong -- pt. V Gender, affective labor and biopolitical economy --