10 results
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2. Visualizing Africa in Chinese Propaganda Posters 1950–1980.
- Author
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Suglo, Ignatius G.D
- Subjects
AFRICA-China relations ,STEREOTYPES ,POSTERS ,PROPAGANDA ,COLD War, 1945-1991 ,PUBLIC opinion - Abstract
This paper examines depictions of Africans in China during the period when China moved to establish diplomatic relations across the African continent – the foundation of what would become Africa–China relations today. Chinese posters were early forms of mass visual interaction with (the image of) foreign nationals. They reflect how Chinese society viewed itself in relation to others as it developed a global awareness through domestic mobilization. This study investigates how Africa and Africans are depicted in Chinese posters and how they shaped and/or reflected discourses of the period. It also examines motivations behind the inclusion of Africans in Chinese posters, arguing that this largely had a domestic rationale. By historicizing the meaning-making process of the image of Africa in 20th-century Chinese posters, this paper demonstrates that Chinese posters informed public opinion by defining friend and foe, focused more on China and her Cold War entanglements than on Africa, and simultaneously challenged and reinforced some widely held stereotypes about the continent. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. China, Africa and the International Aid System: A Challenge to (the Norms Underpinning) the Neoliberal World Order?
- Author
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Gilpin, Shaquille Ifedayo
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL organization ,AFRICA-China relations ,NEOLIBERALISM ,BUSINESS partnerships ,SUSTAINABLE development - Abstract
The China–Africa relationship has received increased interest over the past few decades as scholars critically examine the challenge that China, in its quest for a closer strategic partnership with Africa, poses to the norms governing the neoliberal world order (NLWO). One crucial aspect of this is international aid, and how Chinese aid to Africa differs from Western aid. This paper argues that Chinese aid reduces the power of traditional aid donors to shape the development route of African countries. This new development finance ultimately breaks the monopoly of Western aid to decide how poor countries in the global 'South' develop. In doing so, the Sino–African aid relationship is challenging the current world order as it offers African states the possibility to decouple (or delink) themselves from the global economy. By challenging assumed neoliberal economic development fundamentals, this relationship, if harnessed correctly by African leaders, can pose longer-term ideological questions around the very set of ideas that underpin development itself, while enabling African states the policy space needed to pursue more sustainable development from an Afro-centric perspective. It is this possibility to delink, due to changing ideological fundamentals concerning economic development, that is the challenge China and Africa pose to the NLWO. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Africa and Africans in Wolf Warrior 2 : Narratives of Trust, Patriotism and Rationalized Racism among Chinese University Students.
- Author
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Talmacs, Nicole
- Subjects
CHINESE students ,TRUST ,MOTION picture industry ,PATRIOTISM ,RACISM ,AFRICA-China relations - Abstract
This paper analyses responses from Chinese university students to China's most successful blockbuster to date, Wolf Warrior 2. Responses revealed racialized language objectifying the black African Other and affirmation of existing scepticisms towards Sino-African relations. It is argued that these responses must be understood within the context of trust these students have in the mediated messages they encounter, the Chinese leadership, the hearsay of social networks, and film industry standards established by Hollywood, all of which precondition Chinese student understandings of 'Africa' and 'Africans' that informs their viewing experience. Trust in the nation's film industry, however, also suggests Chinese cinema may have the ability to improve racial awareness among Chinese audiences. To do so though, would require a shift in the film industry's objectives from its current efforts in patriotic education, to portraying China and the Chinese as one of many within an interconnected global community. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. China’s development and its aid presence in Africa: A critical reflection from the perspective of development anthropology.
- Author
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Niu, Zhongguang
- Subjects
AFRICA-China relations ,INTERNATIONAL economic assistance ,APPLIED anthropology ,ECONOMIC development ,HISTORY of economic development ,CHINESE politics & government, 1949- ,AFRICAN politics & government, 1960- - Abstract
This paper is a preliminary reflection on China’s domestic development and its aid presence in Africa. “Development” had its day before the 1970s but then encountered de-constructive and re-constructive critics in the field of Development Anthropology. China’s conceptualization of development has not only drawn a lot from Western development discourse but also evolved with its own features, which deserve a critical reflection in terms of an “elusive discourse” and the “practical pursuit of welfare”, a seemingly paradoxical dichotomy. It follows with China’s foreign assistance or aid presence in Africa, which, the author holds, is imprinted with China’s development practice concepts and illustrated by a case of Chinese development aid in Ethiopia. The paper eventually discusses the would-be roles of Chinese anthropologists, who have been surprisingly absent in recent years, in contrast to Western academia’s intellectual tradition of widely reflecting development issues. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. China–Africa Relations in The Economist , 2019–2021.
- Author
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Obeng-Odoom, Franklin
- Subjects
AFRICA-China relations ,COLONIES ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
The 'Scramble for Africa' has historically been a concept used to describe the plunder of Africa by colonial powers, their subsequent economic capture of African resources, their political control and their racial domination of Africans. But, in recent times, many writers have pointed to Chinese 'Scramble for Africa'. Of these depictions, The Economist 's has been both categorical and relentless. But is the set of relationships between China and African countries imperial? Does it amount to a Chinese 'Scramble for Africa'? If so, what can be done; if not, why not? Neither content nor institutional analyses of 27 stories, sampled from 132 issues of The Economist from 2019 to 2021, show conclusive evidence that the relationship between China and Africa is imperial. Evidence of African indebtedness to China, Chinese opaque resource transactions in Africa, and the controlling effect of China's Belt and Road Initiative typically emphasised by The Economist is serious. But it does not amount to economic plunder, political control, military destabilisation or racial domination. The Economist 's characterisation of China–Africa relations reflects wider processes of Westernisation. Its features include the use of mainstream economic analysis, (mis)representation of the Global South to maintain Western hegemony and inhibiting Southern struggle to break the Western chokehold on global development. As an elite newspaper, The Economist 's 'frame analysis' not only presents news, but also produces views that caricature Global South agendas, especially those that threaten Western liberalism and imperialism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Cultural Diplomacy, Language Planning, and the Case of the University of Nairobi Confucius Institute.
- Author
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Wheeler, Anita
- Subjects
UNIVERSITY of Nairobi. Confucius Institute (Nairobi, Kenya) ,CULTURAL relations ,AFRICA-China relations ,LANGUAGE planning ,CHINESE language education ,HIGHER education ,DIPLOMACY -- Social aspects ,TWENTY-first century ,HISTORY ,INTERNATIONAL cooperation ,INTERNATIONAL economic relations - Abstract
As China’s economic and political presence in Africa increases, so does the need for its government to maintain a favorable image with African publics. Borrowing theories of soft power diplomacy and language planning, this paper analyzes, from the perspectives of African and Chinese policymakers, the impact of the Confucius Institutes on higher education in Africa and its intersections with language planning and cultural diplomacy. An empirical case study at the University of Nairobi Confucius Institute shows that policymakers and administrators anticipate that a competent group of Kenyans with Mandarin language skills will be able to engage with Chinese people and Chinese-owned companies on the ground in Kenya. However, Chinese diplomats are more concerned with China’s image and achieving its political and economic interests in Kenya than with effective cultural exchange and language instruction. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. On the conditions of 'late urbanisation'.
- Author
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Fox, Sean and Goodfellow, Tom
- Subjects
URBANIZATION ,ENVIRONMENTAL disasters ,HISTORY of geography ,AFRICA-China relations ,CITIES & towns ,TWENTY-first century - Abstract
Copyright of Urban Studies (Sage Publications, Ltd.) is the property of Sage Publications, Ltd. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Brokers in the tea trade between China and West Africa.
- Author
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Röschenthaler, Ute
- Subjects
TEA trade ,AFRICA-China relations ,GREEN tea ,SOFT skills ,SOCIAL movements - Abstract
Brokers have played important roles in the trade of green tea between China and Mali, from the 19th century when tea first came to Mali up to the present. They mediate between tea buyers and sellers, work on their own account, use soft skills, knowledge and networks and make a living from the commission they gain. This article examines the work of brokers in the tea trade, the social constellations in which they are active and the scope of their activity. Based on extensive field research in Mali and China, this article shows how brokers create their own jobs in a dynamic business landscape, which is often delimited by governmental policies, competing entrepreneurial activities and social movements. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. China, architecture and Ghana’s spaces: Concrete signs of a soft Chinese imperium?
- Author
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Amoah, Lloyd G. Adu
- Subjects
AFRICA-China relations ,CHINESE architecture ,CHINESE politics & government ,SOFT power (Social sciences) ,AFRICAN politics & government ,FORTIFICATION ,TWENTIETH century ,HISTORY - Abstract
Africa’s interaction with China is beginning to be marked tellingly by Chinese architectural inscriptions on the African cityscape which need to be deconstructed. The furore in the African press and academia that greeted the building and handing over by China of the African Union headquarters in Addis Ababa makes such an interrogation imperative. This study will attempt to offer some understanding of this nascent phenomenon using the Accra cityscape as an exemplary point of reference. In this regard this work seeks to locate the meaning of fortifications within contemporary global and local discourses on power, architecture, symbols, interests and international relations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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