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A favorite icon for cigarette manufacturers across China since the
mid-twentieth century has been the panda, with factories from
Shanghai to Sichuan using cuddly cliche to market tobacco products.
The proliferation of panda-branded cigarettes coincides with
profound, yet poorly appreciated, shifts in the worldwide tobacco
trade. Over the last fifty years, transnational tobacco companies
and their allies have fueled a tripling of the world's annual
consumption of cigarettes. At the forefront is the China National
Tobacco Corporation, now producing forty percent of cigarettes sold
globally. What's enabled the manufacturing of cigarettes in China
to flourish since the time of Mao and to prosper even amidst public
health condemnation of smoking? In Poisonous Pandas, an
interdisciplinary group of scholars comes together to tell that
story. They offer novel portraits of people within the Chinese
polity-government leaders, scientists, tax officials, artists,
museum curators, and soldiers-who have experimentally revamped the
country's pre-Communist cigarette supply chain and fitfully
expanded its political, economic, and cultural influence. These
portraits cut against the grain of what contemporary
tobacco-control experts typically study, opening a vital new window
on tobacco-the single largest cause of preventable death worldwide
today.
A favorite icon for cigarette manufacturers across China since the
mid-twentieth century has been the panda, with factories from
Shanghai to Sichuan using cuddly cliché to market tobacco
products. The proliferation of panda-branded cigarettes coincides
with profound, yet poorly appreciated, shifts in the worldwide
tobacco trade. Over the last fifty years, transnational tobacco
companies and their allies have fueled a tripling of the world's
annual consumption of cigarettes. At the forefront is the China
National Tobacco Corporation, now producing forty percent of
cigarettes sold globally. What's enabled the manufacturing of
cigarettes in China to flourish since the time of Mao and to
prosper even amidst public health condemnation of smoking? In
Poisonous Pandas, an interdisciplinary group of scholars comes
together to tell that story. They offer novel portraits of people
within the Chinese polity—government leaders, scientists, tax
officials, artists, museum curators, and soldiers—who have
experimentally revamped the country's pre-Communist cigarette
supply chain and fitfully expanded its political, economic, and
cultural influence. These portraits cut against the grain of what
contemporary tobacco-control experts typically study, opening a
vital new window on tobacco—the single largest cause of
preventable death worldwide today.
"Bodies of Difference "chronicles the compelling story of
disability's emergence as an area of significant sociopolitical
activity in contemporary China. Keenly attentive to how bodies are
embedded in discourse, history, and personal exigency, Matthew
Kohrman details ways that disability became a fount for the
production of institutions and identities across the Chinese
landscape during the final decades of the twentieth century. He
looks closely at the creation of the China Disabled Persons'
Federation and the lives of numerous individuals, among them Deng
Pufang, son of China's Communist leader Deng Xiaoping.
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