THE PATRIARCHY OF DIASPORA: RACE FANTASY AND GENDER BLINDNESS IN CHEN DA’S STUDIES OF THE NANYANG CHINESE
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Authors
Leow, R
Publication Date
2022Journal Title
Twentieth-Century China
ISSN
1521-5385
Publisher
Project Muse
Type
Article
This Version
AM
Metadata
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Leow, R. (2022). THE PATRIARCHY OF DIASPORA: RACE FANTASY AND GENDER BLINDNESS IN CHEN DA’S STUDIES OF THE NANYANG CHINESE. Twentieth-Century China https://doi.org/10.1353/tcc.2022.0030
Abstract
This paper critically appraises the earliest sociological investigations of Nanyang Chinese communities by the sociologist Chen Da (1892-1975). By exploring Chen's corpus of work and highlighting systemic blindspots of race and gender, it reveals the normative rather than empirical quality of his sociological elaboration of the huaqiao. Tracing the genesis of his research, and his travels through Southeast Asia, it shows how, at each stage, Chen’s investigations, academic networks, connections he made with his local informants, and even his collaborations with his principal translator, offered an understanding of the world beyond a patriarchal, patriotic Chinese diaspora that he declined to explore fully. The paper thus offers an intimate window into the historically contingent conceptual work that went into constructing the Chinese ‘diaspora’, and highlights the need to exercise caution in making ahistorical use of social science studies of overseas Chinese.
Keywords
diaspora, gender, huaqiao, knowledge production, Nanyang, race, sociology
Identifiers
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/tcc.2022.0030
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/330964
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