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Andrew G. Walder





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Andrew G. Walder (born 1953) is an American political sociologist specializing in the study of Chinese society. He has taught at Harvard University and Stanford University, where he joined the faculty in 1997 and is the Denise O'Leary & Kent Thiry Professor of the School of Humanities and Sciences, and a Senior Fellow of the Freeman-Spogli Institute for International Studies at Stanford University.[1]

His research interests include Collective Action, Social Movements, Comparative and Historical Sociology, and Political Sociology. He has published extensively on the Chinese Cultural Revolution, Chinese industry and industrial reform, and Chinese society under Mao Zedong.[2]

Education and career

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Walder was born in 1953.[3] He received his PhD in sociology at the University of Michigan in 1981 and taught at Columbia University before moving to Harvard in 1987, where he headed the MA Program on Regional Studies-East Asia for several years. From 1995 to 1997, he headed the Division of Social Sciences at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology. He joined that Stanford Department of Sociology in 1997. From 1996 to 2006, as a member of the Hong Kong Government's Research Grants Council, he chaired its Panel on the Humanities, Social Sciences, and Business Studies.[2]

In 1985, he was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in the field of sociology. [4]

Reception and critique

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Academic Dongping Han critiques Walder's claim that Mao's pronouncements during the Cultural Revolution were extremely ambiguous, particularly Walder's claim, "It takes an extraordinary amount of energy and imagination to figure out precisely what Mao really meant by such ideas as 'the restoration of capitalism' or 'newly arisen bourgeoise.'"[5] Han writes even illiterate Chinese did not find the terms hard to grasp, noting that in his fieldwork interviews in Jimo county farmers readily understood "restoration of capitalism" to mean loss of the gains from land reform and a return to old social ways and that they understood "newly arisen bourgeoisie" to mean party leaders who did not work.[5]

Selected publications

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References

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  1. ^ Stanford Sociology (2019), Andrew G. Walder
  • ^ a b Stanford_Sociology (2019).
  • ^ Walder, Andrew George WorldCat Identities
  • ^ Andrew G. Walder John Simom Guggenheim Memorial Foundation.
  • ^ a b Han, Dongping (2008). The unknown cultural revolution : life and change in a Chinese village. New York. p. 66. ISBN 978-1-58367-180-1. OCLC 227930948.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
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    Last edited on 5 June 2024, at 09:38  





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    This page was last edited on 5 June 2024, at 09:38 (UTC).

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