Yunhan Wen

温蕴涵

Ethnography | Urban Sociology | Space | Infrastructure | Political Economy | Theory 

CV  

Bulletin board in Baishizhou covered by advertisements seeking tenants.

I’m a Ph.D candidate in Sociology at Princeton University. My research is fundamentally driven by my curiosity about "the urban": how it came to be, and what it has brought. Toward this goal, I study how indigenous villages in Chinese megacities participate in urbanization and economic development as a way to understand the changing state-society relations in China as a result of urbanization. 


Specifically, using a comparative ethnographic study of Shanghai and Shenzhen, I investigate whether and how the institutional legacies of China's industrialization-based urbanization in the first decade of its economic reform carry on to its land-based urbanization driven by the financialization of land in the past two decades.  


I'm omnivorous in my intellectual interests and methods, perhaps too much for my own good. In addition to my doctoral research, I have done research on sexual practices among older adults in rural South Africa, computational methods that treat text as data, and the history of bathroom construction in the PRC.