Logo DOAB
  • Publisher login
    • Support
    • Language 
      • English
      • français
    • Deposit
            View Item 
            •   DOAB Home
            • View Item
            •   DOAB Home
            • View Item
            JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

            Angloscene

            Compromised Personhood in Afro-Chinese Translations

            Thumbnail
            Author(s)
            Ke-Schutte, Jay
            Language
            English
            Show full item record
            Abstract
            Angloscene examines Afro-Chinese interactions within Beijing’s aspirationally cosmopolitan student class. Jay Ke-Schutte explores the ways in which many contemporary interactions between Chinese and African university students are mediated through complex intersectional relationships with whiteness, the English language, and cosmopolitan aspiration. At the heart of these tensions, a question persistently emerges: How does English become more than a language—and whiteness more than a race? Engaging in this inquiry, Ke-Schutte explores twenty-first century Afro-Chinese encounters as translational events that diagram the discursive contours of a changing transnational political order—one that will certainly be shaped by African and Chinese relations. A tremendously nuanced book that moves beyond the verities of postcolonial theory as much as liberal illusions of postracialism in the academy. The ethnographic richness of Angloscene in its expositions of tropes and situated encounters is remarkable and pointed—even poignant.” — DILIP M. MENON, editor of Changing Theory: Concepts from the Global South “Reflecting a critical sensibility from the Global South, Jay Ke-Schutte’s book defies Euro-American-centric perspectives on language, race, and colonialism. The innovative concept of the Angloscene offers an imaginative way to unpack the transnational power matrix that conditions Afro-Chinese encounters.” — FAN YANG, author of Faked in China: Nation Branding, Counterfeit Culture, and Globalization This book reveals the manner in which talk about signs of race and the racialization of those engaged in talk readily emerge hand in hand within social encounters, so that to isolate them from each other is to lose sight of the processes through which inequity persists in social life even when it is abjured.” — ASIF AGHA, Francis E. Johnston Term Professor of Anthropology, University of Pennsylvania, and Editor-in-Chief, Signs and Society
            URI
            https://doab-dev.siscern.org/handle/20.500.12854/196880
            Keywords
            African students; China; social conditions; 21st century; students; thema EDItEUR::J Society and Social Sciences::JN Education
            DOI
            10.1525/luminos.146
            ISBN
            9780520389816
            Publisher
            University of California Press
            Publisher website
            www.ucpress.edu
            Publication date and place
            2023
            Pages
            212
            • OAPEN harvesting collection

            Browse

            All of DOABSubjectsPublishersLanguagesCollections

            My Account

            LoginRegister

            Export

            Repository metadata
            Doabooks

            • For Researchers
            • For Librarians
            • For Publishers
            • Our Supporters
            • Resources
            • DOAB

            Newsletter


            • subscribe to our newsletter
            • view our news archive

            Follow us on

            • Twitter

            License

            • If not noted otherwise all contents are available under Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)

            donate


            • Donate
              Support DOAB and the OAPEN Library

            Credits


            • logo Investir l'avenirInvestir l'avenir
            • logo MESRIMESRI
            • logo EUEuropean Union
              This project received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 871069.

            Directory of Open Access Books is a joint service of OAPEN, OpenEdition, CNRS and Aix-Marseille Université, provided by DOAB Foundation.

            Websites:

            DOAB
            www.doabooks.org

            OAPEN Home
            www.oapen.org

            OAPEN OA Books Toolkit
            www.oabooks-toolkit.org

            Export search results

            The export option will allow you to export the current search results of the entered query to a file. Differen formats are available for download. To export the items, click on the button corresponding with the preferred download format.

            A logged-in user can export up to 15000 items. If you're not logged in, you can export no more than 500 items.

            To select a subset of the search results, click "Selective Export" button and make a selection of the items you want to export. The amount of items that can be exported at once is similarly restricted as the full export.

            After making a selection, click one of the export format buttons. The amount of items that will be exported is indicated in the bubble next to export format.