2017
DOI: 10.1146/annurev-anthro-102116-041531
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China–Africa Encounters: Historical Legacies and Contemporary Realities

Abstract: This review uses multilingual sources to illuminate China–Africa encounters in historical, socialist, and postsocialist contexts. It emphasizes interregional connections over time and uses nuanced ethnographic accounts to complement macrogeopolitical analyses. The article focuses on mutual stereotypes as well as on the negotiation of social and cultural barriers in everyday life. It challenges static, bounded conceptual categories in social science and policy research. The ethnographic studies cited highlight … Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…The Caucasus and the Levant, for instance, are regions of the world that enjoy historic ties to one another yet that under the rubric of area studies rubric and Cold War dynamics were divided in relationship to different cultural areas: the Middle East and Eurasia (e.g., Nunan, 2011). More recently, Siu and McGovern (2017) have also pointed to the important mediating role of West Asia in the historical establishment of connectivity between Africa and East Asia—a mediating role that historians have also recognized as being critical in the deeper past (Sen, 2016). Thus, the category of West Asia is helpful because it moves away from the exceptionalism that is inherent in the notion of “the Middle East.” Instead, West Asia highlights the need to better understand the connections, ties, and circulations between this context and other parts of Asia.…”
Section: West Asia Eurasia and The Middle Eastmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Caucasus and the Levant, for instance, are regions of the world that enjoy historic ties to one another yet that under the rubric of area studies rubric and Cold War dynamics were divided in relationship to different cultural areas: the Middle East and Eurasia (e.g., Nunan, 2011). More recently, Siu and McGovern (2017) have also pointed to the important mediating role of West Asia in the historical establishment of connectivity between Africa and East Asia—a mediating role that historians have also recognized as being critical in the deeper past (Sen, 2016). Thus, the category of West Asia is helpful because it moves away from the exceptionalism that is inherent in the notion of “the Middle East.” Instead, West Asia highlights the need to better understand the connections, ties, and circulations between this context and other parts of Asia.…”
Section: West Asia Eurasia and The Middle Eastmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Heated debates and whispered rumours surrounding Chinese imports notwithstanding, Chinese-made commodities have found eager buyers across Africa. From footwear (Dobler 2008) and jewellery (Haugen 2017) to medicine (Hsu 2007) and motorcycles (Siu and McGovern 2017), Chinese commodities sell well. Many Mozambican and Ethiopian customers, especially those with fewer means, embrace the ‘Made in China’ brand, yet not without restyling the logo.…”
Section: Welcoming and Refashioning ‘Made In China’mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In Guinea, as elsewhere in Africa and around the world, inexpensive goods from China have changed people's everyday lives, transformed landscapes, shifted ambitions for travel and business, and introduced new forms of risk for local traders (Colloredo‐Mansfield ; Kuo ; Sylvanus ). The entry of Chinese sellers and goods into African markets has resulted in what Siu and McGovern () call “contested democratization,” in which lower prices enable more African traders to do business, but established African traders resent their businesses being undercut. Likewise, low prices give African consumers access to more commodities, but many of these consumers complain about the inferior quality of inexpensive Chinese products (Siu and McGovern , 344–47).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The entry of Chinese sellers and goods into African markets has resulted in what Siu and McGovern () call “contested democratization,” in which lower prices enable more African traders to do business, but established African traders resent their businesses being undercut. Likewise, low prices give African consumers access to more commodities, but many of these consumers complain about the inferior quality of inexpensive Chinese products (Siu and McGovern , 344–47).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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