Buck, DanielWu, Shuxi2024-01-092024-01-092024-01-09https://hdl.handle.net/1794/29192This thesis examines contemporary rural transformations in China. I suggest that a different spatial relationship among production, reproduction, and consumption is in the making, grafted onto the urban-rural divide. A different urban-rural relationship is also in the making, shaped by changing divisions and integrations of labor that go into production, reproduction, and consumption. I argue that these two processes are occurring through a double commodification of the countryside, which produces what I call “rural commodity” and “rural-as-commodity”. “Rural commodity” refers to the ways in which products of rural labor are absorbed into urban-centered accumulation processes. “Rural-as-commodity” refers to how rurality itself has become an object of desire and exchange. These two forms of commodity collaborate to transform the urban-rural division of labor in China to facilitate accumulation. I focus specifically on rural tourism and media representations of new rurality to illustrate how these two forms of commodification converge.en-USAll Rights Reserved.Agrarian StudiesChinaMedia StudiesPolitical EconomyRural DevelopmentVariety ShowChanging Rurality in Contemporary China: Double Commodification of the CountrysideElectronic Thesis or Dissertation