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EAST ASIA: AN INTERNATIONAL QUATERLY VOL: 24 NO 2 (6) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   078523


Chineseness and Chinese Indonesian Business Practices: a generational and discursive enquiry / Koning, Juliette   Journal Article
Koning, Juliette Journal Article
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Publication 2007.
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2
ID:   078524


Family Firms, Transnationalism and Generational Change: Chinese Enterprise in Britain and Malaysia / Gomez, Edmund Terence   Journal Article
Gomez, Edmund Terence Journal Article
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Publication 2007.
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3
ID:   078525


On (Mis-)Conceptions of Culture as a Vehicle of Business Success: Singapore Chinese Investment Strategies after Failing in China   Journal Article
Dahles, Heidi Journal Article
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Publication 2007.
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4
ID:   078526


Re creating the comfort zone from common ethnicity towards comm: the transnationalisation process of Malaysian Chinese small and medium enterprises / Zwart, Esther   Journal Article
Zwart, Esther Journal Article
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Publication 2007.
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5
ID:   078527


Re-Conceptualising notions of Chinese-ness in a Southeast Asian / Jacobsen, Michael   Journal Article
Jacobsen, Michael Journal Article
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Publication 2007.
Key Words Ethnicity  Diaspora  Identity  Entrepreneurship  Ethnic Chinese 
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6
ID:   078522


Un-Packing Packaged Cultures: Chinese-ness in International Business / Ooi, Can-Seng   Journal Article
Ooi, Can-Seng Journal Article
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Publication 2007.
Summary/Abstract This paper focuses on how the Chinese are represented in the international business literature. Chinese cultures are packaged to make knowledge about the Middle Kingdom more accessible to a general audience. The ways in which these packaged cultures are framed and constructed will be questioned here. Drawing inspiration from Foucault, this article identifies four traits of a packaged culture - it mediates, it asserts the uniqueness of the culture, it selectively packages the culture and it claims that cultural differences matter in business. These traits will form the basis for comparing and examining three methods of packaging a culture, namely the general-macroscopic, ethnographic present and critical emergence approaches. This paper concludes that researchers should reflect on the power they yield when they represent another culture, and that the general public may privilege theories that are accessible rather than sound.
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