Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:1372Hits:19817272Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID186112
Title ProperPolitics of Imagery
Other Title InformationUnderstanding the Historical Genesis of Sinophobia in Pacific Geopolitics
LanguageENG
AuthorRatuva, Steven
Summary / Abstract (Note)The weaponization of racialized imagery has been a common feature of geopolitical contestation in contemporary history. The paper critically examines the historical genesis of Sinophobic narratives, which have been common features of the big power geopolitical contestation in the Pacific. The globalization of capitalism in the nineteenth century and the West’s attempts to penetrate the Chinese market and exploitation of its resources led to tension, skirmishes and wars. The myth of racial European superiority and corresponding inferiority of the Chinese was weaponized as an ideological justification for colonial domination, exploitation of cheap labour and appropriation of China’s resources and wealth. In recent years, the Sinophobic paranoia has been exacerbated by China’s Belt and Road initiative, a strategy at global economic and technological supremacy to counter the West’s dominance. This competition for global hegemony is played out in various parts of the world and the Pacific included. The paper critically discusses various historical factors associated with Sinophobia in the context of the USA, France and Australia and how these have influenced these countries’ contemporary approaches to Chinese expansionism.
`In' analytical NoteEast Asia: An International Quarterly Vol. 39, No.1; Mar 2022: p.13–28
Journal SourceEast Asia: An International Quarterly Vol: 39 No 1
Key WordsGeopolitics ;  Colonialism ;  China ;  Racialization ;  Sinophobia ;  Pacifc


 
 
Media / Other Links  Full Text