Through a series of engaging and entirely unique ethnographic oral histories of the subaltern residents of a now all-but-destroyed Beijing neighborhood, Harriet Evans evokes a community, a fractured class, and a way of life that have now surely disappeared into the area's reconstructed shiny commercialism. Never central actors on any stage, and barely bit extras on the stage of Beijing's transformations, Evans's interlocutors are the kinds of people who disappear in any history. Her talent in rendering these left-behind urban denizens is astonishing. Beijing from Below makes a huge contribution. -- Rebecca E. Karl, author of * The Magic of Concepts: History and the Economic in Twentieth-Century China *
Harriet Evans makes visible a world that has been hiding in plain sight-the packed courtyards and dense social networks of one of Beijing's poorest neighborhoods. Drawing upon many years of conversation with residents and archival research, Evans provides a compelling account of everyday struggles and pleasures in a community that has been shaped, and neglected, by state policies. Beijing from Below raises profound questions about the reach of an ambitious revolution, even within its own capital city. -- Gail Hershatter, author of * Women and China's Revolutions *
[Beijing from Below] is a first-hand study which describes the lives of ordinary people at the grassroots, or more accurately at the urban roots, in the form of story-telling.... Only by reading the book can we appreciate the depth and detail of [Evans'] findings.... -- Michael Sheringham * Asian Affairs *
Harriet Evans's Beijing from Below presents an exceptional insight into the precarious lives of what Evans calls the 'subalterns of history'.... It is a valuable read for anyone interested in China's urban transformation and its effects on urban populations, subalternity and precarity. -- Laura Vermeeren * China Information *
A first-hand study which describes the lives of ordinary people at the grassroots, or more accurately at the urban roots, in the form of storytelling.... Only by reading the book can we appreciate the depth and detail of her findings. -- Michael Sheringham * East Asia *
[Beijing from Below] is a must for anyone who has a warm heart for Beijing, or who is interested in how Chinese urban development affects the lives of the population.... Evans gives a face to the rickshaw drivers, sellers of tourist paraphernalia in Tian'anmen Square, the dishwashers in restaurants and other nameless people who populate Dahalar. -- Judith van de Bovenkamp * China 2025 *
Beijing from Below utilizes thae anlytical rigor of ethnography to contextualize and theorize social experience without sacrificing the detailed and unique richness of each individual story.... The writing is compelling, and students of all levels (from undergraduate to graduate) would benefit from this ethnography. -- Jenny Chio * China Review International *
[Beijing from Below] gives the reader the feeling of being fully immersed in the lives of the residents of Dashalar.... The book will be of great value to anyone interested in Chinese urbanization, memory studies, public history, civilizing processes, use of cultural heritage, politics of identities and agency of the urban poor. -- Florence Graezer Bideau * The China Quarterly *
Beijing from Below is an important work. . . . In a book rich in detail and analysis, Harriet Evans takes the reader into a respectful and considered examination of the lives of Dashalar's residents and their struggles to survive. -- Anna Hayes * Asian Studies Review *
Beijing From Below impresses for the capacity to offer the space of discourse to those who are losing their physical space, amidst a steadfast urban transformation. The way Evans acknowledges and brings their voices to the core is as poignant as it is rigorous, making Beijing from Below a fulfilling reading, and an indispensable work for future research in the field. -- Placido Gonzalez Martinez * Orientalistische Literaturzeitung *
By any standards, this is an extraordinarily rich work, and it is all the more valuable in illuminating a transformative period in Beijing's (and China's) history, foregrounding the stories of people and families whose voices are still relatively rarely heard. -- Marjorie Dryburgh * Biography *