
New Books in Economic and Business History Nellie Chu, "Precarious Accumulation: Fast Fashion Bosses in Transnational Guangzhou" (Duke UP, 2026)
Mar 28, 2026
Nellie Chu, Assistant Professor of Cultural Anthropology at Duke Kunshan University, studies migrant entrepreneurs at the center of Guangzhou’s fast fashion industry. She explores laoban identity and stalled mobility. Listens cover landlords and patrols, wholesale market rhythms, transnational ties with South Korean and West African traders, and how COVID and platforms reshaped production and precarity.
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Migrant Bosshood Is A Hybrid Identity
- Migrant bosshood sits between wage labor and entrepreneurship as workers self-identify as laoban despite limited autonomy.
- Nellie Chu observed subcontracting niches where individuals run small informal factories yet still do heavy production labor daily.
Aspirations Mask Class Shifts And Precarity
- Aspirations for entrepreneurial freedom drive migrant bosses but mask class shifts and rising precarity under post-socialist capitalism.
- Chu links China Dream–style individualism to weakened class identity and unstable, flexible work rhythms.
Precarity Is Produced By A Web Of Actors
- Governance shaping precarity is relational: state, quasi-state, landlords, and private security jointly extract value.
- Chu details peasant landlords building dense 'kissing buildings' and patrol officers who extort fines or close stalls for regulation.

