Contributors
Chapter 1. Shuang Gao: Introduction: Chineseness as Competing Discourses
Chapter 2. Jing Huang: Chineseness in Diaspora: Multilingualism, Heteroglossia and Fluid Ethnicity
Chapter 3. Luke Lu: When ‘Chineseness’ Is Not Preferred: Accounts of Academically Elite Students from China in Singapore’s Schools
Chapter 4. Elaine Chung and Xuan Wang: Joseonjok YouTubers: Translating Vernacular Chineseness in South Korea
Chapter 5. Jessica Birnie-Smith: Framing Chineseness and Indonesianness on the Periphery
Chapter 6. Eric S. Henry: Narrating the Future Self: Strategic Stylisation and Cosmopolitan Stancetaking in Chinese IELTS Preparation Classes
Chapter 7. Shuang Gao: Coffee, Social Space and Middle-Class Romance: Customer Writings in an Independent Coffee Shop in China
Chapter 8. Mingyi Hou: The Authenticity, Cultural Authority and Credibility of Weibo Public Intellectuals
Chapter 9. Xiaoxiao Chen: ‘Foreigners’ in One’s Own Land: Analysing Touristic Representations of Chineseness in the New York Times
Chapter 10. Lionel Wee: Commentary
Index
Provides a systematic examination of Chineseness against current national and international backgrounds
Shuang Gao is a sociolinguist working at the University of Liverpool, UK. Her research uses ethnographic and discourse analytical methods to understand China under globalization. She is the author of Aspiring to be Global: Language and Social Change in a Tourism Village in China (Multilingual Matters, 2019).
Xuan Wang is a Senior Lecturer in Chinese Studies at Cardiff University, UK. Her research is interdisciplinary, drawing insights from sociolinguistics, cultural studies, digital communication, ethnography and globalisation studies. She has published a number of peer-reviewed journal articles and book chapters.
At a time when China’s global presence is undoubted, this book
reminds us of the imperative urgency for interrogating the notion
of Chineseness. What makes this volume important is that it compels
us to go beyond discussions on what Chineseness is, towards
examination of how it’s done and what it does to whom under which
sociopolitical conditions.
*Miguel Pérez-Milans, University College London, UK*
This book convincingly demonstrates how global imaginaries permeate
Chinese communities at home and abroad, through the mobility of
texts, people, and understandings of language and citizenship. A
welcome addition to research on language and globalization, it
insightfully probes how multilingualism has been promoted over the
long history of Chinese migration.
*Adrienne Lo, University of Waterloo, Canada*
...this book offers a rich source of information about the project
of ‘unpacking Chineseness’ (190). The variety of types of data
analysed, as well as the diversity of research sites, makes this
book relevant for those who are interested in Chineseness,
language, and identity, as well as sociolinguistics and discourse
analytical research.
*Leying Li, IOE, University College London, UK, Language in Society
51, 2022*
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