Renarrating the “western territories:” training programs for college students in China’s Far West
Renarrating the “western territories:” training programs for college students in China’s Far West
Author(s): Alessandra CappellettiSubject(s): Ethnic Minorities Studies
Published by: Univerzita Karlova v Praze, Fakulta sociálních věd
Keywords: Dunhuang; national minorities; Chinese history; community; memories; China’s youth; renarrating;
Summary/Abstract: This paper shows how history is rewritten in China by shaping the memories of its youth, who create new communities by sharing and renarrating new memories. They can become a powerful channel to convey an official interpretation of local histories to a larger public, by marginalizing and appropriating local narratives. The idea behind the program for voluntary narrators under analysis1 is to shape memories of China’s young and wealthy students about a place, by transforming its rich cross-cultural fundamentals, symbolic and inner meanings, into a representation of the Nation, able to convey powerful declinations of official narratives on the history of China. The analysis is conducted in consideration of the larger context of the construction and transmission of the official discourse on national identity in contemporary PRC. Specifically, the author provides evidence of how young Chinese internalize and disseminate the party line on Chineseness, and the subordinate role assigned within this process to “minorities.” Minorities are seen both as a threat and an opportunity: a threat to the Party and social cohesion as carriers of diverse identities, an opportunity for contrasting Chineseness with the Other, a backward entity, inadequate and unable to embrace—if not help— the path to modernity.
Journal: Journal of Nationalism, Memory & Language Politics
- Issue Year: 16/2022
- Issue No: 01
- Page Range: 23-50
- Page Count: 28
- Language: English