Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Chinese Discourses on Happiness
View through CrossRef
Contemporary Chinese voices approach the topic of happiness from many diverse positions and perspectives. Happiness, often represented by the Chinese character fu 福, is part of the visual propaganda campaign of the Chinese Dream, and raising levels of happiness has become an official government target. Much is written and said about happiness by the Chinese government, but also by authors of self-help books, by journalists, TV chat show hosts, pop psychologists and China’s netizens. This book is the first attempt at analyzing these various writings and related images to see what concepts and agendas inform this proliferation of happiness discourse. Through comprehensive analysis of text and images in multimedia formats, the essays in this volume reflect the diversity and pervasiveness of Chinese happiness discourse enacted by different social groups and actors. The aim of this volume is to analyse out what different social actors, different philosophical, psychological, cultural, political ideas bring to the subject of happiness in contemporary China. The authors bring a number of theoretical perspectives and conceptual approaches to this endeavour, resulting in a multidisciplinary and multi-methodological volume. The different chapters illuminate how the recent discourse of happiness encompasses both motifs of individual self-interest and collective socialist ethics. The volume shows that happiness has emerged as a culturally and historically specific and relevant topic for China’s population that resonates across class divisions. As such, the book make a significant contribution from the perspective of the Humanities to the understanding of individual and collective happiness in China today.
Hong Kong University Press
Title: Chinese Discourses on Happiness
Description:
Contemporary Chinese voices approach the topic of happiness from many diverse positions and perspectives.
Happiness, often represented by the Chinese character fu 福, is part of the visual propaganda campaign of the Chinese Dream, and raising levels of happiness has become an official government target.
Much is written and said about happiness by the Chinese government, but also by authors of self-help books, by journalists, TV chat show hosts, pop psychologists and China’s netizens.
This book is the first attempt at analyzing these various writings and related images to see what concepts and agendas inform this proliferation of happiness discourse.
Through comprehensive analysis of text and images in multimedia formats, the essays in this volume reflect the diversity and pervasiveness of Chinese happiness discourse enacted by different social groups and actors.
The aim of this volume is to analyse out what different social actors, different philosophical, psychological, cultural, political ideas bring to the subject of happiness in contemporary China.
The authors bring a number of theoretical perspectives and conceptual approaches to this endeavour, resulting in a multidisciplinary and multi-methodological volume.
The different chapters illuminate how the recent discourse of happiness encompasses both motifs of individual self-interest and collective socialist ethics.
The volume shows that happiness has emerged as a culturally and historically specific and relevant topic for China’s population that resonates across class divisions.
As such, the book make a significant contribution from the perspective of the Humanities to the understanding of individual and collective happiness in China today.
Related Results
Organizational Happiness
Organizational Happiness
Organizational happiness is an intuitively attractive idea, notwithstanding the difficulty of defining happiness. A preference for unhappiness rather than happiness in an organizat...
Understanding the Role of Income in Personal Happiness: A Comprehensive PSM Analysis in the United States
Understanding the Role of Income in Personal Happiness: A Comprehensive PSM Analysis in the United States
This study examines the relationship between income and individual happiness in the United States using propensity score matching (PSM) analysis. Results reveal that income has a s...
Understanding the Role of Income in Personal Happiness: A Comprehensive PSM Analysis in the United States
Understanding the Role of Income in Personal Happiness: A Comprehensive PSM Analysis in the United States
This study examines the relationship between income and individual happiness in the United States using propensity score matching (PSM) analysis. Results reveal that income has a s...
Soiling Suburbia
Soiling Suburbia
“The electronic media do away with cleanliness; they are by their nature ‘dirty’. That is part of their productive power…” (Enzensberger qtd. in Har...
Al-Ghazali's Concept of Happiness in The Alchemy of Happiness
Al-Ghazali's Concept of Happiness in The Alchemy of Happiness
Al-Ghazali's book entitled The Alchemy of Happiness describes happiness. It often becomes a reference of behavior of mysticism and psychology, especially Islamic psychology. Howeve...
Chinese Cultural Values and Happiness: the Composition and Expanse of Happiness Circle
Chinese Cultural Values and Happiness: the Composition and Expanse of Happiness Circle
The conceptualisation of happiness varies across different cultures. In Chinese culture, happiness is not only inclusive of oneself, but also hinges on the people is related to and...
Why Do Indians Experience Less Happiness Than Pakistanis?
Why Do Indians Experience Less Happiness Than Pakistanis?
This study explores the enigma of happiness inequality between India and Pakistan, despite India’s economic prowess. Employing inequality regression models, the study pinpoints cru...
Psychometric characteristics of the Oxford Happiness Inventory
Psychometric characteristics of the Oxford Happiness Inventory
Psychometric characteristics of the Oxford Happiness Inventory, obtained on various foreign samples, are described. The features of three variants of the Oxford Happiness Inventory...

