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ID113016
Title ProperPerformance, spectacle, and visual poetry in the sixtieth anniversary national day parade in the People's Republic of China
LanguageENG
AuthorKuever, Erika
Publication2012.
Summary / Abstract (Note)The sixtieth anniversary of the founding of the People's Republic of China on 1 October 2009 was marked with a massive parade in the heart of Beijing viewed on hundreds of millions of television screens across the nation. English-language media coverage focused primarily on what it saw as the event's explicit message: the Communist Party's celebration of the nation's military might and continued economic growth, and its origins in a coherent and uniquely Chinese ideology. Such coverage largely reflected international fears of China and thus misread the parade's import and impact on its domestic audience. I argue that the National Day events are better understood as a form of visual poetry that relied on performance to emotionally conflate party, nation, and state. Both the speeches of party leaders and the scripted remarks of state media commentators relied on language and ideas that the Chinese public has heard numerous times. The visual elements of the parade, in contrast, were unprecedented in both scale and spectacle. Hundreds of thousands took part in displays of collective harmony, unified patriotic sentiment, and ethnic unity. The distinctive style and rhythm of the parade depicted a vision of nationhood without the ethnic fractures, labour unrest, and massive inequalities that constitute the greatest threat to the power of the party-state as it embarks on its seventh decade of continuous rule.
`In' analytical NoteStudies in Ethnicity and Nationalism Vol. 12, No.1; 2012: p.6-18
Journal SourceStudies in Ethnicity and Nationalism Vol. 12, No.1; 2012: p.6-18
Key WordsChina ;  People's Republic of China ;  Communist Party ;  Chinese Ideology ;  National Day