Interpreting the Chinese Diaspora

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A01=Bonnie Pang
A01=Guanglun Michael Mu
Asian Australian Artists
Australia
Author_Bonnie Pang
Author_Guanglun Michael Mu
Bourdieu's Field Analysis
Bourdieu's Reflexive Sociology
Bourdieu’s Field Analysis
Bourdieu’s Reflexive Sociology
Canada
Category=GTM
Category=JBSL
Category=JHB
Category=JHMC
Category=JNAM
Category=JNF
Category=NHTQ
Chinese Australian
Chinese Australian Students
Chinese Canadian Students
Chinese Diaspora
Chinese Heritage Language
Chinese Physicality
Chinese youth adaptation in Western societies
CHL Learning
Core Project
Cosmopolitan Habitus
diaspora studies
Diasporic Chinese
Domestic Milieu
educational socialisation
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
globalisation
Higher Quality Social Support
intergenerational transmission
migration
multiculturalism
Participant Objectivation
Pierre Bourdieu
Primary Pedagogic Work
qualitative sociology
racial identity formation
Racialised Habitus
Racialised Social Order
Resilience Process
resilience theory
Secondary Socialisation
Social Cohesion Scale
social stasis
Young Chinese Australians
Young People's Habitus
Young People’s Habitus
Youth Resilience

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367660185
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Sep 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Globalisation and migration have created a vibrant yet dysphoric world fraught with different, and sometimes competing, practices and discourses. The emergent properties of the modern world inevitably complicate the being, doing, and thinking of Chinese diasporic populations living in predominantly white, English-speaking societies. This raises questions of what 'Chineseness' is. The gradual transfer of power from the West to the East shuffles the relative cultural weights within these societies. How do the global power shifts and local cultural vibrancies come to shape the social dispositions and positions of the Chinese diaspora, and how does the Chinese diaspora respond to these changes? How does primary pedagogic work through family upbringing and secondary pedagogic work through educational socialisation complicate, obfuscate, and enrich Chineseness?

Drawing on Pierre Bourdieu’s reflexive sociology on relative and relational sociocultural positions, Mu and Pang assess how historical, contemporary, and ongoing changes across social spaces of family, school, and community come to shape the intergenerational educational, cultural, and social reproduction of Chinese diasporic populations. The two authors engage in an in-depth analysis of the identity work, educational socialisation, and resilience building of young Chinese Australians and Chinese Canadians in the ever-changing lived world. The authors look particularly at the tensions and dynamics around the participants’ life and educational choices; the meaning making out of their Chinese bodies in relation to gender, race, and language; and the sociological process of resilience that enculturates them into a system of dispositions and positions required to bounce back from structural constraints.

Guanglun Michael Mu is Senior Research Fellow in the Faculty of Education at Queensland University of Technology, Australia. His work in this book was supported by the Vice-Chancellor’s Research Fellowship at Queensland University of Technology and the Australian Research Council grant DE180100107 (Resilience, Culture, and Class: A Sociological Study of Australian Students).

Bonnie Pang is Marie Skłodowska-Curie Fellow and Senior Research Fellow at Leeds Beckett University, United Kingdom (2019–2020), Senior Lecturer and a school-based member of the Institute for Culture and Society at Western Sydney University, Australia.

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