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ID157956
Title ProperToward transnational identity? the reconstruction of Hakka identity in Thailand
LanguageENG
AuthorWang, Li-Jung
Summary / Abstract (Note)The Hakka people (Hakkas) are a global cultural ethnic group. This article explored the experiences of the Hakkas in Thailand. One major ethnic minority in Thailand is the Chinese people (14 percent of the total population) who engage in businesses and commerce throughout the country. Fifty-six percent of the Chinese are Chaozhounese, and 16 percent are Hakkas. This article argued that the Thai-Hakka identity is a transnational construction mobilized by multiple agencies at the local, national, and global levels. This identity is a result of the negotiation from the common motherland (China) in the past, the new modern Hakka discourse and the multicultural policy (Taiwan), and the complex ethnic experiences and interactions in everyday life (Thailand). Compared to the traditional diaspora viewpoint (pluri-locally distributed, with a strong identity to the motherland), the Thai-Hakka identity has gravitated towards a new path of transnational identity (pluri-locally distributed, without a clear centre–periphery relation).
`In' analytical NoteAsian Ethnicity Vol. 19, No.2; Mar 2018: p.211-234
Journal SourceAsian Ethinicity Vol: 19 No 2
Key WordsChinese Overseas ;  Transnational Identity ;  Hakka Studies ;  Thai Studies


 
 
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