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Original Articles

Beyond Chinese groupism: Chinese Australians between assimilation, multiculturalism and diaspora

Pages 1184-1196 | Received 16 Oct 2012, Accepted 16 Oct 2013, Published online: 10 Dec 2013
 

Abstract

This essay argues that the tension between ‘ethnic’ and ‘national’ identity is not contingent, but structurally embedded in the workings of the contemporary nation state. Through an analysis of ‘the Chinese’ in ‘Australia’ it aims to demonstrate that seemingly unambiguous concepts such as assimilation (the ethnic is absorbed by the national), multiculturalism (the ethnic coexists with the national) and diaspora (the ethnic transcends the national) cannot capture the diverse difficulties, ambivalences and failures of identification, belonging and political agency experienced by Chinese Australians. A more satisfactory analysis requires a questioning of the groupness of ‘the Chinese’ (as well as ‘the Australians’) and overcoming conceptual groupism (Brubaker): the tendency to take discrete, sharply differentiated, internally homogeneous and externally bounded groups as basic constituents of social life. Instead a more processual and flexible understanding is proposed, where the relationship between ‘ethnic’ and ‘national’ identity is one of constant evolution and mutual entanglement.

Notes

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Ien Ang

IEN ANG is Distinguished Professor of Cultural Studies and Director of the Institute for Culture and Society, University of Western Sydney.

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