"Lisa Richaud’s brilliant new book explores how retirees who lived through the Maoist period use urban public parks in China as an energized space in which to gather and sing old socialist anthems in a new spirit of casual and non-committal fun. Rooted in extensive ethnographic fieldwork, Richaud’s conceptually inventive and meticulously researched study reshapes our understanding of what it means to be and act political in contemporary China."Margaret Hillenbrand, Professor of Modern Chinese Literature and Visual Culture, University of Oxford"Casual Assemblies is an insightful, sophisticated work. Through a careful analysis of sustained fieldwork among the parks of Beijing, Richaud takes parkgoers’ claims about “having fun” seriously, challenging the common assumption that leisure activities in China are inherently political."Paul Kendall, Senior Lecturer in Chinese Cultural Studies, University of Westminster"Casual Assemblies offers a new understanding of performance of Maoist repertoires in Beijing parks as cultural forms detached from politics through their reappropriation on a ludic, casual mode. Imaginative and rigorous, this book is a must-read for anyone interested in public sociality after Mao or in the connections between fun and politics, in China and beyond."Isabelle Thireau, Professor of Sociology at EHESS and Senior Researcher at CNRS