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The rise of China has reconstituted the regional identity in Asia
as well as the lens through which understanding of China and
self-understanding are no longer separate processes intellectually.
China scholarship in South and Southeast Asia necessarily
highlights meanings of encountering China that Western social
sciences fail to reflect because academics in many places, being
migrants, navigate and combine more than one civilization forces.
With China in itself undergoing transformation, it is unlikely that
one can simply speak of China without multiple qualifications of
what one actually refers to. The book gathers authors who come from
different scholarly traditions to reflect upon how the presentation
of China in academic writings as well as think tank analyses can
engender different identity possibilities. The book therefore
complicates the category 'China' to enable mutual empathy between
everything that in one way or another relies on Chineseness as
object or subject in accordance with the identity strategies of the
China experts.
Colonial legacies in knowledge production affect the way the world
is represented and understood today. However, the subject is rarely
attended. The book, Colonial Legacies and Contemporary Studies of
China and Chineseness: Unlearning Binaries, Strategizing Self, is
about the colonial construction of intellectual perspectives of the
colonized population in terms of the latter's approach to China and
Chineseness in the modern world. Relying on the available oral
histories of senior China scholars primarily in Asia, authors from
various postcolonial and colonial sites present these multiple
routs of self-constitution and reconstitution through the use of
China and Chineseness as category. The revealed manipulation of
this third category, romantically as well as antagonistically, is
easier than straightforward self-reflection for us all to accept
that, coming to identities and relations, none, even subaltern, is
politically innocent or capable of epistemological monopoly.
Through comparative studies, it shows a way of self-understanding
that does not always require discursive construction of border or
cultural consumption of any specific 'other'.With US-China rivalry
possibly lasting for decades, this book offers extremely rich and
contrasting practices from the subaltern worlds for anyone in a
quest for humanist alternatives. This interdisciplinary and
transnational project contributes to post-colonial studies,
cultural studies, international relations, China and Chinese
studies, and the comparative histories of East Asia, Southeast
Asia, and South Asia.
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