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Diasporic Cold Warriors 1st edition Chien-wen Kung

  • SKU: BELL-50569716
Diasporic Cold Warriors 1st edition Chien-wen Kung
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Diasporic Cold Warriors 1st edition Chien-wen Kung instant download after payment.

Publisher: Cornell University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 27.32 MB
Pages: 292
Author: Chien-Wen Kung
ISBN: 9781501762215, 9781501762222, 1501762214, 1501762222, 2021026422, 2021026423
Language: English
Year: 2022
Edition: 1

Product desciption

Diasporic Cold Warriors 1st edition Chien-wen Kung by Chien-wen Kung 9781501762215, 9781501762222, 1501762214, 1501762222, 2021026422, 2021026423 instant download after payment.

In Diasporic Cold Warriors, Chien-Wen Kung explains how the Chinese Nationalist Party (Kuomintang or KMT) sowed the seeds of anticommunism among the Philippine Chinese with the active participation of the Philippine state.

From the 1950s to the 1970s, the Philippine Chinese were Southeast Asia's most exemplary overseas Chinese Cold Warriors. During these decades, no Chinese community in the region was more vigilant in identifying and rooting out suspected communists from within its midst; not one was as committed to mobilizing against the People's Republic of China (PRC) as those in the former US colony. Ironically, for all the fears of overseas Chinese communities' ties to the PRC at the time, the example of the Philippines shows that the "China" that intervened the most extensively in any Southeast Asian Chinese society during the Cold War was the Republic of China (ROC) on Taiwan.

For the first time, Kung tells the story of the Philippine Chinese as pro-Taiwan, anticommunist partisans, tracing their evolving relationship with the KMT and successive Philippine governments over the mid-twentieth century. Throughout, he argues for a networked and transnational understanding of the ROC-KMT party-state and demonstrates that Taipei exercised a form of non-territorial sovereignty over the Philippine Chinese with Manila's participation and consent. Challenging depoliticized narratives of cultural integration, he also contends that, because of the KMT, Chinese identity formation and practices of belonging in the Philippines were deeply infused with Cold War ideology.

Drawing upon archival research and fieldwork in Taiwan, the Philippines, the United States, and China, Diasporic Cold Warriors reimagines the histories of the ROC, the KMT, and the Philippine Chinese, connecting them to the broader canvas of the Cold War and postcolonial nation-building in East and Southeast Asia.

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