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Overseas Chinese Christians in Contemporary China

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Overseas Chinese Christians in Contemporary China explores how diasporic Chinese understandings of what it means to be Chinese are changing in post-1978 China. Ethnographically, it focuses on overs...
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  • 27 August 2020
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Overseas Chinese Christians in Contemporary China explores how diasporic Chinese understandings of what it means to be Chinese are changing in post-1978 China. Ethnographically, it focuses on overseas Chinese Christian business people residing in Shanghai. Hyper-mobile, well-educated, and financially secure, these elites adopt a long-term view of their time in the country. This study examines how these elites put Christianity to work, mediating their hopes, fears, and obligations, in order to illuminate the ways in which this overseas Chinese experience departs from existing academic models of diasporic Chinese as either bridge-builders or pragmatic capitalists. By focusing on religion, this study offers novel insights into how overseas Chinese are making a place for themselves in a globalising China.
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Price: $129.00
Pages: 154
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: Chinese Overseas
Publication Date: 27 August 2020
ISBN: 9789004438552
Format: Hardcover
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"Lau should be commended for conceiving of a refreshingly unique lens through which to examine the role of Christianity in contemporary China. This volume would also be attractive to those interested in religion and diaspora: although some will undoubtedly disagree, by illustrating a very different way elite diasporan Chinese are reimagining themselves in relation to 'a remembered ancestral homeland and their mainland Chinese counterparts,' Lau has undeniably presented a new perspective of religion and diaspora in China."
– Joseph Chadwin, University of Vienna, in Religious Studies Review (June 2021).
Sin Wen Lau, Ph.D. (ANU, Anthropology, 2010), is Senior Lecturer at the University of Otago. She serves on the editorial board of Social Sciences and Missions (Brill) and has published on religion, childhood, and China, including Religion and Mobility in a Globalising Asia (Routledge, 2014, co-editor).