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CHINA PERSPECTIVES NO 4 2013 (9) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   126364


Banality of singing red: secondary production of everyday life in Chongqing's Red culture campaign / Mei, Xiao   Journal Article
Mei, Xiao Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract This paper examines the interaction between Chongqing's Red culture programme (2008-2012) and the practices of Singing Red by retiree participants during the campaign. Drawing on ethnographic data collected during fieldwork in Chongqing, this paper argues that the community practices of retirees constitute a distinctive structure that is less powerful but more durable than that of the official Red culture programme. The practice of Singing Red by the retirees in their daily life did not subvert, but exercised tactical effect on the official programme.
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2
ID:   126366


Debating constitutionalism in China: dreaming of a liberal turn? / Yuen, Samson   Journal Article
Yuen, Samson Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
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3
ID:   126358


Forty years in paradox: post-normalisation Sino-Japanese relations / Yinan He   Journal Article
Yinan He Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract Post-normalisation Sino-Japanese relations have been fraught with contradictions. In particular, three paradoxes stand out over the past 40 years. First, despite many shared geopolitical and economic interests, China and Japan have never developed genuine strategic cooperation, and since the 2000s have even evinced a trend towards thinly-veiled or open rivalry. Second, time, rather than healing the wounds of past wars, has since the mid-1980s yielded only a more vivid and bitter recollection of history that has bedevilled both official and popular relations. Third, diplomatic and commercial ties as well as "thick" societal contacts developed since normalisation have failed to bridge a significant gap in values. This article reviews Sino-Japanese relations since 1972, with a special focus on internal politics on both sides. It considers the influence of their conflicting historical narratives and political systems, and of the broader international geopolitical context, on the evolution of their delicate, paradoxical bilateral relationship. It concludes that a healthier bilateral relationship may depend on the development in both countries of a genuine, robust civil society that is relatively free from political interference.
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4
ID:   126368


Risking one’s life to petition the authorities: the black jail industry in China / Winckler, Hugo   Journal Article
Winckler, Hugo Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
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5
ID:   126361


Shanghai’s history curriculum reforms and shifting textbook portrayals of Japan / Vickers, Edward; Biao, Yang   Journal Article
Vickers, Edward Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract This article examines the coverage of Japan in Shanghai's senior high history textbooks since the early 1990s - a period when the city's status as China's "showpiece for the global era" has been widely touted. Uniquely among cities on the Chinese mainland, Shanghai has throughout this period enjoyed the right to publish and prescribe its own textbooks for use in local schools (a right extended to most other regions only since the early 2000s). The portrayal of Japan in local texts thus offers a window onto the way in which a self-avowedly "global" Chinese metropolis has balanced an outward-looking and internationalist vision with the requirement for history to serve patriotic education. It also sheds light on the meaning and extent of local curricular "autonomy" in contemporary China.
Key Words Education  Modernity  Japan  China  Autonomy  Identity 
Six Day War  Shanghai  History 
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6
ID:   126363


Territorial disputes, trade and diplomacy: examining the repercussions of the Sino-Japanese territorial dispute on bilateral trade / Nagy, Stephen Robert   Journal Article
Nagy, Stephen Robert Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract This paper will examine the repercussions of the Sino-Japanese territorial dispute on bilateral trade. Using interviews with businesses, scholars, and government officials in Beijing, Hong Kong, and Tokyo, and data gathered from policy papers and businesses, this paper argues that the traditional seikei bunri (separation of politics and economics) relationship that existed between Japan and China in the post-World War II period has given way to a more confrontational relationship in which economic pressure can be and has been applied as a means to press Japan on bilateral issues. It argues that understanding the way in which frictions arising from territorial disputes have affected the Sino-Japanese trading relationship may hold implications for the handling of similar disputes across North- and South-East Asia.
Key Words Trade  Territorial Disputes  Japan  China  Integration  Sino - Japanese Relations 
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7
ID:   126359


Transcending victimhood: Japan in the public historical museums of Taiwan and the People's Republic of China / Vickers, Edward   Journal Article
Vickers, Edward Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract This article looks at how the major national (or pseudo-national) historical museums in China and Taiwan interpret and display very different "new rememberings" of Japan. The main focus is on the permanent exhibitions of the modern history wing of the National Museum of China (NMC; formerly the Museum of the Chinese Revolution), which finally reopened in 2011 after almost a decade of refurbishment, and of the National Museum of Taiwan History (NMTH), which opened in the same year. It discusses how museum portrayals of Japan reflect divergent public discourses on national identity. Through examining the relationship between museums and the apparatus of the Chinese state (ROC and PRC), the first section locates the NMC and NMTH in their bureaucratic and political contexts. A typology of approaches to the construction of national identity is then offered, considering the implications of different conceptions of identity for portrayals of Japan and its relationship with China or Taiwan. The remainder of the article looks in turn at the NMC and NMTH, outlining the history of each before examining how Japan is represented in their permanent exhibitions. It concludes by considering what can be learnt from this about the evolving relationship between official historical discourse and the broader political context on both sides of the Taiwan Strait.
Key Words Japan  Taiwan  China  Identity  Museums  History 
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8
ID:   126362


Wartime enemy or Asian model? an examination of the role of Ja / Han, Christine   Journal Article
Han, Christine Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract This article compares the history curricula of Hong Kong and Singapore since the 1980s with respect to their treatment of Japan, particularly its involvement in World War II. It examines the role played by Japan as one significant "Other" against which its former victims define themselves. As well as being cast as a wartime aggressor and agent of local "victimhood," Japan has also been hailed as an economic and military model worthy of emulation. By comparing portrayals in school history textbooks and their shifts over time, the author shows how images of Japan have been used by state elites in these two former British colonies to construct significantly divergent official visions of "postcolonial" identity.
Key Words Japan  Singapore  Hong Kong  Six Day War  Images  Textbooks 
Other  History 
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9
ID:   126367


What impact will the opening of two-way investments in the serv / Pesant, Tanguy Le   Journal Article
Pesant, Tanguy Le Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
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