Flexible Citizenship: The Cultural Logics of Transnationality

flexible-citizenshipAuthor: Aihwa Ong

Publisher: Duke University Press

Publishing year: 1999

Call number: DS732.N58

Description: Few recent phenomena have proved as emblematic of our era, and as little understood, as globalization. Are nation-states being transformed by globalization into a single globalized economy? Do global cultural forces herald a postnational millennium? Tying ethnography to structural analysis, Flexible Citizenship explores such questions with a focus on the links between the cultural logics of human action and on economic and political processes within the Asia-Pacific, including the impact of these forces on women and family life.
Explaining how intensified travel, communications, and mass media have created a transnational Chinese public, Aihwa Ong argues that previous studies have mistakenly viewed transnationality as necessarily detrimental to the nation-state and have ignored individual agency in the large-scale flow of people, images, and cultural forces across borders. She describes how political upheavals and global markets have induced Asian investors, in particular, to blend strategies of migration and of capital accumulation and how these transnational subjects have come to symbolize both the fluidity of capital and the tension between national and personal identities. Refuting claims about the end of the nation-state and about “the clash of civilizations,” Ong presents a clear account of the cultural logics of globalization and an incisive contribution to the anthropology of Asia-Pacific modernity and its links to global social change.
This pioneering investigation of transnational cultural forms will appeal to those in anthropology, globalization studies, post-colonial studies, history, Asian studies, Marxist theory, and cultural studies.

从世界看华人

作者:丘立本从世界看华人

出版社:南岛出版社

出版年份:2000

索书号:DS732.Q1c

简介:本书从历史、现实和学科发展的要求三方面,论证了从世界史角度研究华侨华人问题的必要性和意义,并从这一新视角审视了华侨华人若干重大问题,研究了国外华人研究学术思潮的演变,颇有新意,对读者开阔视野,更新观念,拓展思维空间,不无裨益。

The Overseas Chinese

Author: Lois Mitchisonthe overseas chinese

Publisher:The Bodley Head

Publishing year:1961

Call number: DS732.M682

Description: There are some twelve million Chinese in South-East Asia and their importance to the countries they live in is even greater than their number suggest. The majority of South-East Asian traders and artisans are Chinese; so is a large proportion of the town populations. In Malaya the Chinese are the biggest racial community, and Singapore is almost wholly a Chinese town.

The problem of these overseas Chinese is a problem of divided loyalties, and local opinion about them is sharply divided. They are sometimes seen as most valuable members of their communities– law-abiding, hardworking and intelligent. Or, they can be seen as ‘China’s fifth column’– loyal to China only and not to the countries in any future struggle in Asia.

Can the Chinese be assimilated in the countries where they are living? Have the measures already taken by South-East Asian countries helped or hindered assimilation? What policies in Asia and the rest of the world can help assimilation? Does the Communist leadership in China regard the overseas communities as a help or a hindrance in its attempts to gain the friendship of other Asian nations? These questions, so vital to the future of Asia, are all fully discussed.