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ID174430
Title ProperChinatowns and the Rise of China
LanguageENG
AuthorAng, Ien
Summary / Abstract (Note)In the early twentieth century, Chinatowns in the West were ghettoes for Chinese immigrants who were marginalized and considered ‘other’ by the dominant society. In Western eyes, these areas were the no-go zones of the Oriental ‘other’. Now, more than a hundred years later, traditional Chinatowns still exist in some cities but their meaning and role has been transformed, while in other cities entirely new Chinatowns have emerged. This article discusses how Chinatowns today are increasingly contested sites where older diasporic understandings of Chineseness are unsettled by newer, neoliberal interpretations, dominated by the pull of China's new-found economic might. In particular, the so-called ‘rise of China’ has spawned a globalization of the idea of ‘Chinatown’ itself, with its actual uptake in urban development projects the world over, or a backlash against it, determined by varying perceptions of China's global ascendancy as an amalgam of threat and opportunity.
`In' analytical NoteModern Asian Studies Vol. 54, No.4; Jul 2020: p.1367 - 1393
Journal SourceModern Asian Studies 2020-08 54, 4
Key WordsRise of China ;  Chinatowns