This is the first book to focus explicitly on how China’s rise as a major economic and political actor has affected societies in Southeast Asia. It examines how Chinese investors, workers, tourists, bureaucrats, longtime residents, and adventurers interact throughout Southeast Asia. The contributors use case studies to show the scale of Chinese influence in the region and the ways in which various countries mitigate their unequal relationship with China by negotiating asymmetry, circumventing hegemony, and embracing, resisting, or manipulating the terms dictated by Chinese capital.
Table des matières
Foreword / Wang Gungwu
List of Abbreviations
Introduction: China’s “Rise” in Southeast Asia from a Bottom-Up Perspective / Pál Nyíri and Danielle Tan
Part One | Identities
1. Investors, Managers, Brokers, and Culture Workers: How Migrants from China Are Changing the Meaning of Ch-ineseness in Cambodia / Pál Nyíri
2. Multiplying Diversities: How “New” Chinese Mobilities Are Changing Singapore / Brenda S. A. Yeoh and Weiqiang Lin
3. Translocal Pious Entrepreneurialism: Hui Business and Religious Activities in Malaysia and Indonesia / Hew Wai Weng
Part Two | Livelihoods
4. Border Guanxi: Xinyimin and Transborder Trade in Northern Thailand / Aranya Siriphon
5. Ambivalent Encounters: Business and the Sex Markets at the China-Vietnam Borderland / Caroline Grillot and Juan
Part Three | Norms
6. Entangling Alliances: Elite Cooperation and Competition in the Philippines and China / Caroline S. Hau
7. Chinese Enclaves in the Golden Triangle Borderlands: An Alternative Account of State-Formation in Laos / Danielle Tan
8. “China in Burma”: A Multiscalar Political Economy Analysis / Kevin Woods
9. Water Governance in the Mekong Basin: Scalar Trade-offs, Transnational Norms, and Chinese Hydropower Investment / Oliver Hensengerth
Part Four | Aspirations
10. “Search for Knowledge as Far as China!” Indonesian Responses to the Rise of China / Johanes Herlijanto
11. Stimulating Circuits: Chinese Desires and Transnational Affective Economies in Southeast Asia / Chris Lyttleton
Glossary of Chinese Characters
References
Contributors
Index
A propos de l’auteur
Wang Gungwu, chair of the East Asian Institute and University Professor, National University of Singapore; author of Renewal: The Chinese State and the New Global History (Chinese University Press, 2013) and Global History and Migrations (Westview Press, 1997); and coeditor of China and the New International Order (Routledge, 2008).