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What Chinese want: culture, communism, and China's modern consumer
Author
Publisher
Palgrave Macmillan
Publication Date
2012
Language
English
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Table of Contents
From the Book - 1st ed.
Pt. 1, The Chinese worldview:
Modern Middle Kingdom: old pipes, new palace.
Pt. 2, Top down: doing business in China:
Anta and always: an introduction to Chinese business
The rise of Chinese brands: a distant dream
Brand management in China: three golden rules
Chinese recession tactics: how marketers can win during a downturn
The Chinese boardroom: face and fear
Tycoon Tang Jun's lost face: a Chinese business tragedy
Managing China: stimulating creativity in a sea of convention
Winning designs in China: standing out to fit in
Digital China: liberated consumers. constricted corporations
E-commerce in China: patriarchal benevolence
Illegal DVDs: why piracy is here to stay
The business of advertising in China: incremental progress, no breakthroughs.
Pt. 3, The new, old Chinese consumer:
Barbie, Starbucks, and COFCO: an introduction to Chinese consumerism
The new middle class: constants and variables
China's lower-tier cities: brighter eyes, bigger markets
China's booming luxury market: gold mine or landmine?
Car-crazy China: where ego and anxiety collide
China's senior market: gray today, golden tomorrow
China's ambivalent tiger moms: when in Rome...
Young digital lives: a parallel universe of ambitious release
The Chinese and food: survival and success.
Pt. 4, Chinese society:
Family and country and me: an introduction to Chinese society
Codependence: China's middle class and the Communist Party
The long, long march: civil society in China; The Sichuan earthquake aftermath: forging a new civil society?; China's dairy scandal: two steps back
Life in Shanghai's lanes: a community affair
A day at the Shanghai zoo: families in action
Christmas in China: universal release, transactional gain
Ritualistic observation: the dark matter of Chinese civilization
Sex in China: prudence and prurience.
Pt. 5, China and the world:
Icons and identity: an introduction to China's engagement with the world
China's worldview: don't rock our boat
How China sees America: dangerous love
The Obama brand in China: beware of cool cat; Standing up in China; Dealing with dissenters: pragmatism, not passion
The Beijing Olympics and Shanghai Expo: party power plays; The torch relay: friend or foe, China perseveres; At the opening ceremony: China reveals its soul; Shanghai's World Expo: an internal affair
China and its neighbors: colleagues, not friends; Japan and China: contrasting response to the financial crisis; Japan and China: contrasting response to natural disaster; A note on South Korea; China and India: a match made in heaven?
Pt. 6, Epilogue:
The myths of modern China:
Myth 1: Popular anger means the party's power is weakening
Myth 2: American-style individualism is taking root
Myth 3: Contemporary Chinese have no beliefs
Myth 4: The internet will revolutionize China
Myth 5: The Chinese market is, like Europe, many countries
Myth 6: The Chinese consumer is inscrutable
Myth 7: The Chinese growth model is in critical danger
Myth 8: China Inc. will eat America's lunch
Myth 9: China is the twenty-first century superpower
Myth 10: China is militarily aggressive.
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More Details
ISBN
9780230340305
023034030
023034030
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