
New Books Network Di Wu et. al, eds., "China As Context: Anthropology, Post-globalisation and the Neglect of China" (Manchester UP, 2025)
Jan 16, 2026
Di Wu, an Associate Professorial Fellow at Zhejiang University, and Ed Pulford, a Senior Lecturer in Chinese Studies at the University of Manchester, dive into the critical need for recognizing China's role in global anthropology. They discuss how the ongoing geopolitics, especially the Russia-Ukraine conflict, highlights China's significance as a context in social sciences. The conversation covers the dangers of marginalizing Chinese perspectives and explores rich ethnographic case studies, advocating for a collaborative global approach to understanding China.
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China As Ordinary Context
- Treating China as context reframes it from a distant object to an ordinary background shaping global encounters.
- This shift asks anthropologists to problematize context and attend to China-inflected dynamics across diverse field sites.
Neglect Of Chinese Knowledge Production
- "Neglect" signals Chinese-grounded ideas are marginalized in Anglophone anthropology despite China's global significance.
- The editors want to bridge knowledge traditions so Chinese knowledge can inform broader theory-making.
Use Layered, Processual Contexts
- Use both 'yujing' (immediate situation) and 'beijing' (background) to capture context's layered meanings.
- Treat context as dynamic and co-created through interactions, not as a static backdrop.

