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In 1989, students marched on Tiananmen Square demanding democratic
reform. The Communist Party responded with a massacre, but it was
jolted into restructuring the economy and overhauling the education
of its young citizens. A generation later, Chinese youth are a
world apart from those who converged at Tiananmen. Brought up with
lofty expectations, they've been accustomed to unprecedented
opportunities on the back of China's economic boom. But today,
China's growth is slowing and its demographics rapidly shifting,
with the boom years giving way to a painful hangover. Immersed in
this transition, Eric Fish, a millennial himself, profiles youth
from around the country and how they are navigating the education
system, the workplace, divisive social issues, and a resurgence in
activism. Based on interviews with scholars, journalists, and
hundreds of young Chinese, his engrossing book challenges the idea
that today's youth have been pacified by material comforts and
nationalism. Following rural Henan students struggling to get into
college, a computer prodigy who sparked a nationwide patriotic
uproar, and young social activists grappling with authorities, Fish
deftly captures youthful struggle, disillusionment, and rebellion
in a system that is scrambling to keep them in line-and,
increasingly, scrambling to adapt when its youth refuse to conform.
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