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ID191778
Title ProperDiverse fragility, fragile diversity
Other Title Information Sinophone writing in the Philippines and Indonesia
LanguageENG
AuthorStenberg, Josh
Summary / Abstract (Note)Attending to postwar Chinese-language letters in Indonesia and the Philippines reveals a stronger tendency to write within a discourse of long-distance cultural nationalism than in hybrid or local modes. Omitting cultural nationalist discourses from a view of the corpus risks skewing accounts of Sinophone production, since many authors who write in Chinese have been receptive to ethnic, cultural, and even political appeals from China. This result is also ironic, in that it is specifically production in Chinese (rather than in imperial or archipelagic languages) which is most in tension with the postmodern and postcolonial bent of the Sinophone turn. As an open system for interrogating essentialist definitions of ‘Chineseness’, Sinophone Studies should also accommodate the culturally (and sometimes politically) orthodox ‘Chinese’ strands of Southeast Asian writing. Considering non- or less-hybrid strands of the corpus in turn opens new avenues for understanding the region’s Sinophone cultural production as the result of a rich, politically diverse network with considerable scope for comparative intraregional study.
`In' analytical NoteAsian Ethnicity Vol. 24, No.1; Jan 2023: p.59-77
Journal SourceAsian Ethinicity Vol: 24 No 1
Key WordsChinese Indonesians ;  Chinese in the Philippines ;  Sinophone literature ;  Overseas Chinese literature


 
 
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