Nation in action : making Chinese in the rural borderland between China and North Korea

This dissertation examines everyday nationhood, ethnicity and migration in the Korean ethnic minority borderland regions in Northeast China. The population under study are the rural residents of Yanbian Korean Autonomous Prefecture in Jilin Province, the region with the highest concentration of ethn...

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Main Author: Chen, Shiwei
Other Authors: Sun Hsiao-Li Shirley
Format: Theses and Dissertations
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/90268
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/48473
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-90268
record_format dspace
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Social sciences::Sociology::Communities, classes and races
DRNTU::Social sciences::Sociology::Rural sociology
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences::Sociology::Communities, classes and races
DRNTU::Social sciences::Sociology::Rural sociology
Chen, Shiwei
Nation in action : making Chinese in the rural borderland between China and North Korea
description This dissertation examines everyday nationhood, ethnicity and migration in the Korean ethnic minority borderland regions in Northeast China. The population under study are the rural residents of Yanbian Korean Autonomous Prefecture in Jilin Province, the region with the highest concentration of ethnic Koreans. Data collection is based on multi-sited fieldwork over the span of three years, utilizing participant observation and in-depth interviews. Two rounds of long-term fieldwork were conducted – one in a borderland village in Yanbian, China, and the other in Gyeonggi Province, South Korea. Long-term fieldwork was supplemented by several short-term visits, usually around two weeks per visit, to Yanbian, South Korea, and North Korea. Official documents collected in archival bureaus in China and South Korea were also used for analysis. The dissertation is organized into two parts. Part I includes three chapters, a historical overview of ethnogenesis and ethnic classification in China from top-down perspectives (Chapter 1), a review on the sociological studies of ethnicity and nationalism in everyday life (Chapter 2), methodology and a description of the main fieldsite, a village about 10 km from the North Korean-Chinese border (Chapter 3). Part II includes three empirical chapters that examine three aspects of everyday nationhood and ethnicity in the ethnic Korean village: the uses of a stone monument that commemorates the Korean War as part of nation-building (Chapter 4), economic development policy implementation and the uses of ethnic and national framing related to their implementation (Chapter 5), and the governance of emigration and the utilizations of ethnic capital and its impact on social relationship in both the sending and receiving societies (Chapter 6). The dissertation contributes to three fields of sociological inquiry in ethnicity and nationalism studies. First, I have re-examined the relationship between historic sites and nation-building and argue that such sites could be conceptualized as representations of state-sponsored narratives, objects participating in everyday life and rituals, as well as multitude of designed and emerging action possibilities. Second, I presented that economic development policies are intertwined with nationalization in the ethnic minority regions. Therefore, beyond actual economic benefits, they are also (symbolic) “gestures”, which have to be conceptualized as ethnic and national frames among the residents that emerge as part of local manifestation of the state. I also argue that nation- building is facilitated by the communist party-building. Nationhood is constructed to embrace different ethnic groups through fostering recognition of the party. Third, ethnicity can be perceived as a form of capital to facilitate (re)migration, and different political organizations define (and sometimes contest) the value of this form of capital, which ultimately influence everyday grouping practices. It is also important to distinguish family-based network from ethnic grouping. In summary, this study of everyday nationhood and ethnicity of rural Yanbian residents shows that nationalization is highly politicalized and ethnicization is facilitated economically, which provides a new understanding of the “dual identities” of ethnic minority Koreans beyond the dichotomous division between politics and culture.
author2 Sun Hsiao-Li Shirley
author_facet Sun Hsiao-Li Shirley
Chen, Shiwei
format Theses and Dissertations
author Chen, Shiwei
author_sort Chen, Shiwei
title Nation in action : making Chinese in the rural borderland between China and North Korea
title_short Nation in action : making Chinese in the rural borderland between China and North Korea
title_full Nation in action : making Chinese in the rural borderland between China and North Korea
title_fullStr Nation in action : making Chinese in the rural borderland between China and North Korea
title_full_unstemmed Nation in action : making Chinese in the rural borderland between China and North Korea
title_sort nation in action : making chinese in the rural borderland between china and north korea
publishDate 2019
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/90268
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/48473
_version_ 1681059766783180800
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-902682020-07-02T02:02:38Z Nation in action : making Chinese in the rural borderland between China and North Korea Chen, Shiwei Sun Hsiao-Li Shirley School of Social Sciences Zhou Min DRNTU::Social sciences::Sociology::Communities, classes and races DRNTU::Social sciences::Sociology::Rural sociology This dissertation examines everyday nationhood, ethnicity and migration in the Korean ethnic minority borderland regions in Northeast China. The population under study are the rural residents of Yanbian Korean Autonomous Prefecture in Jilin Province, the region with the highest concentration of ethnic Koreans. Data collection is based on multi-sited fieldwork over the span of three years, utilizing participant observation and in-depth interviews. Two rounds of long-term fieldwork were conducted – one in a borderland village in Yanbian, China, and the other in Gyeonggi Province, South Korea. Long-term fieldwork was supplemented by several short-term visits, usually around two weeks per visit, to Yanbian, South Korea, and North Korea. Official documents collected in archival bureaus in China and South Korea were also used for analysis. The dissertation is organized into two parts. Part I includes three chapters, a historical overview of ethnogenesis and ethnic classification in China from top-down perspectives (Chapter 1), a review on the sociological studies of ethnicity and nationalism in everyday life (Chapter 2), methodology and a description of the main fieldsite, a village about 10 km from the North Korean-Chinese border (Chapter 3). Part II includes three empirical chapters that examine three aspects of everyday nationhood and ethnicity in the ethnic Korean village: the uses of a stone monument that commemorates the Korean War as part of nation-building (Chapter 4), economic development policy implementation and the uses of ethnic and national framing related to their implementation (Chapter 5), and the governance of emigration and the utilizations of ethnic capital and its impact on social relationship in both the sending and receiving societies (Chapter 6). The dissertation contributes to three fields of sociological inquiry in ethnicity and nationalism studies. First, I have re-examined the relationship between historic sites and nation-building and argue that such sites could be conceptualized as representations of state-sponsored narratives, objects participating in everyday life and rituals, as well as multitude of designed and emerging action possibilities. Second, I presented that economic development policies are intertwined with nationalization in the ethnic minority regions. Therefore, beyond actual economic benefits, they are also (symbolic) “gestures”, which have to be conceptualized as ethnic and national frames among the residents that emerge as part of local manifestation of the state. I also argue that nation- building is facilitated by the communist party-building. Nationhood is constructed to embrace different ethnic groups through fostering recognition of the party. Third, ethnicity can be perceived as a form of capital to facilitate (re)migration, and different political organizations define (and sometimes contest) the value of this form of capital, which ultimately influence everyday grouping practices. It is also important to distinguish family-based network from ethnic grouping. In summary, this study of everyday nationhood and ethnicity of rural Yanbian residents shows that nationalization is highly politicalized and ethnicization is facilitated economically, which provides a new understanding of the “dual identities” of ethnic minority Koreans beyond the dichotomous division between politics and culture. Doctor of Philosophy 2019-05-30T01:04:03Z 2019-12-06T17:44:26Z 2019-05-30T01:04:03Z 2019-12-06T17:44:26Z 2019 Thesis Chen, S. (2019). Nation in action : making Chinese in the rural borderland between China and North Korea. Doctoral thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/90268 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/48473 10.32657/10220/48473 en 273 p. application/pdf