Beyond spatial liminality : 'Chinese' student returnees in 1950s' Guangzhou
During the 1950s and 1960s, hundreds of thousands of ethnic Chinese, mostly from Southeast Asia, returned to the newly founded People’s Republic of China (PRC). Their return was prompted not only by socialist propaganda but by soaring maltreatment in their countries of residence. This chapter discus...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1554852023-03-11T20:04:23Z Beyond spatial liminality : 'Chinese' student returnees in 1950s' Guangzhou van Dongen, Els T.-K. Hon School of Humanities History Humanities::History Student Returnees People's Republic of China Jinan University Liminality Guangzhou During the 1950s and 1960s, hundreds of thousands of ethnic Chinese, mostly from Southeast Asia, returned to the newly founded People’s Republic of China (PRC). Their return was prompted not only by socialist propaganda but by soaring maltreatment in their countries of residence. This chapter discusses one subgroup of these returnees, namely, the “student returnees” (guiqiao xuesheng), in relation to the re-founding of Jinan University in Guangzhou as a “special” university for returned overseas Chinese and returnees from Hong Kong and Macao. The chapter argues that the concept of liminality (van Gennep) is applicable to the plight of the student returnees in the 1950s’ Guangzhou in three ways. Firstly, analogous to other Cold War “frontier zones;” Guangzhou was a liminal space where two worlds met and collided. Secondly, however, the status of the returnees was also liminal in that they were to undergo a transition from “capitalists” to “socialists” through education as a “rite of passage.” Finally, their situation was liminal in that they were always “in-waiting” for the next ritual, with no true end date to their transition. Hence, for the “Chinese” student returnees, liminality went beyond the spatial – it also contained ideological, moral, ritual, and temporal aspects. The chapter hence reveals the regional dimensions of the Cold War, the fluidity of Cold War borders, and how the ordering of space contained elements that transcended the physical. The main primary sources for this chapter include publications by Jinan University and archival documents from the Guangdong Provincial Archives in Guangzhou. Accepted version 2022-03-02T06:21:16Z 2022-03-02T06:21:16Z 2022 Book Chapter van Dongen, E. (2022). Beyond spatial liminality : 'Chinese' student returnees in 1950s' Guangzhou. T.-K. Hon (Eds.), Cold War Cities: The Politics of Space in Europe and Asia during the 1950s (pp. 67-87). Routledge. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/155485 9780367179823 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/155485 10.4324/9780429058844 67 87 en RG 78/16 Cold War Cities: The Politics of Space in Europe and Asia during the 1950s This is an Accepted Manuscript of a book chapter published by Routledge in Cold War Cities: The Politics of Space in Europe and Asia during the 1950s on 27 Aug 2021, available online: https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429058844. application/pdf Routledge |
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Humanities::History Student Returnees People's Republic of China Jinan University Liminality Guangzhou van Dongen, Els Beyond spatial liminality : 'Chinese' student returnees in 1950s' Guangzhou |
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During the 1950s and 1960s, hundreds of thousands of ethnic Chinese, mostly from Southeast Asia, returned to the newly founded People’s Republic of China (PRC). Their return was prompted not only by socialist propaganda but by soaring maltreatment in their countries of residence. This chapter discusses one subgroup of these returnees, namely, the “student returnees” (guiqiao xuesheng), in relation to the re-founding of Jinan University in Guangzhou as a “special” university for returned overseas Chinese and returnees from Hong Kong and Macao. The chapter argues that the concept of liminality (van Gennep) is applicable to the plight of the student returnees in the 1950s’ Guangzhou in three ways. Firstly, analogous to other Cold War “frontier zones;” Guangzhou was a liminal space where two worlds met and collided. Secondly, however, the status of the returnees was also liminal in that they were to undergo a transition from “capitalists” to “socialists” through education as a “rite of passage.” Finally, their situation was liminal in that they were always “in-waiting” for the next ritual, with no true end date to their transition. Hence, for the “Chinese” student returnees, liminality went beyond the spatial – it also contained ideological, moral, ritual, and temporal aspects. The chapter hence reveals the regional dimensions of the Cold War, the fluidity of Cold War borders, and how the ordering of space contained elements that transcended the physical. The main primary sources for this chapter include publications by Jinan University and archival documents from the Guangdong Provincial Archives in Guangzhou. |
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T.-K. Hon |
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T.-K. Hon van Dongen, Els |
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Book Chapter |
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van Dongen, Els |
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van Dongen, Els |
title |
Beyond spatial liminality : 'Chinese' student returnees in 1950s' Guangzhou |
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Beyond spatial liminality : 'Chinese' student returnees in 1950s' Guangzhou |
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Beyond spatial liminality : 'Chinese' student returnees in 1950s' Guangzhou |
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Beyond spatial liminality : 'Chinese' student returnees in 1950s' Guangzhou |
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Beyond spatial liminality : 'Chinese' student returnees in 1950s' Guangzhou |
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beyond spatial liminality : 'chinese' student returnees in 1950s' guangzhou |
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Routledge |
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2022 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/155485 |
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