Abstract
This article investigates how China’s graduates navigate the civil service exam as a means to reclaim temporal sovereignty amid the structural shift of ‘state advances, private sector retreats’. The exam transcends its role as a career gateway, becoming a symbolic site where individuals resist the temporal volatility of the private sector – marked by age-based layoffs and fragmented rhythms – by aligning with the state’s stable temporal structures. Yet this pursuit unveils a paradox of ironic compliance: in rejecting market-driven temporal chaos, individuals surrender to the regimented rhythms of state governance, exchanging one form of uncertainty for another. This tension influences career paths, personal relationships, and social identities, as civil servants are valorized for mastering political time. The article conceptualizes political time as a governance tool that, akin to economic extraction, mines individuals’ temporal resources – attention, energy, and life plans – and redirects them toward state-defined objectives. By illuminating this dynamic, the article reveals how temporal governance simultaneously constrains and enables the construction of temporal sovereignties in modern China.
Published Version
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