This ePaper investigates the Straits Chinese community and their positioning relative to the British Empire and the Chinese Empire around 1900. It studies their responses to and interactions with the transition from a world of empires to a world of nation-states. The Straits Chinese are framed as a cosmopolitan community in a cosmopolitan city who played an important role in the reconfiguration of imperial citizenship and the deterritorialisation of China. Through their own and others’ adoption of racial discourses, they found themselves in a double bind, not quite Chinese and not quite British. This shaped their encounter with early Chinese nationalism. Consequently, this paper disrupts the teleology of decolonisation and demonstrates how ...
This paper builds on a recent trend in the historiography of the British Empire, one which emphasise...
Among the Chinese who migrated to Australia, New Zealand and Canada from the mid nineteenth century ...
This essay argues that to adequately answer the question its title poses, anthropological approaches...
The Straits Chinese Magazine (SCM), published in Singapore between 1897 and 1907, was a watershed in...
This dissertation examines the relationship between China's expansionism and overseas Chinese empowe...
This chapter considers the ways in which Straits Chinese elites in Singapore strategically used disc...
This dissertation examines the making of the Chinese society in Perak. It scrutinizes the Chinese mi...
This dissertation examines how multiple imperial powers in Chinese treaty port cities interacted dur...
An attempt is made to demonstrate that locally-based Chinese communities as such did not take shape ...
Cultural and religious differences, coupled with the hostland’s innate sense of uneasiness over the ...
This study is primarily concerned with the Chinese communities in New South Wales and Victoria gen...
The British informal empire in China is often mistakenly believed to have represented the British go...
Intra-Asian Dynamics, Mobility of Ideas, and Intellectual Exchange in Southeast AsiaPanel 1.07 - New...
This chapter draws attention to the efforts of Chinese residents and subjects in Australia seeking e...
This article reviews the history of the Hakka, Cantonese and Hokkien dialect groups who had successi...
This paper builds on a recent trend in the historiography of the British Empire, one which emphasise...
Among the Chinese who migrated to Australia, New Zealand and Canada from the mid nineteenth century ...
This essay argues that to adequately answer the question its title poses, anthropological approaches...
The Straits Chinese Magazine (SCM), published in Singapore between 1897 and 1907, was a watershed in...
This dissertation examines the relationship between China's expansionism and overseas Chinese empowe...
This chapter considers the ways in which Straits Chinese elites in Singapore strategically used disc...
This dissertation examines the making of the Chinese society in Perak. It scrutinizes the Chinese mi...
This dissertation examines how multiple imperial powers in Chinese treaty port cities interacted dur...
An attempt is made to demonstrate that locally-based Chinese communities as such did not take shape ...
Cultural and religious differences, coupled with the hostland’s innate sense of uneasiness over the ...
This study is primarily concerned with the Chinese communities in New South Wales and Victoria gen...
The British informal empire in China is often mistakenly believed to have represented the British go...
Intra-Asian Dynamics, Mobility of Ideas, and Intellectual Exchange in Southeast AsiaPanel 1.07 - New...
This chapter draws attention to the efforts of Chinese residents and subjects in Australia seeking e...
This article reviews the history of the Hakka, Cantonese and Hokkien dialect groups who had successi...
This paper builds on a recent trend in the historiography of the British Empire, one which emphasise...
Among the Chinese who migrated to Australia, New Zealand and Canada from the mid nineteenth century ...
This essay argues that to adequately answer the question its title poses, anthropological approaches...