Seeing Like a Minority: Political Tourism and the Struggle for Recognition in China

This paper outlines the operation of what may be called “political tourism” in China, and analyses the role of the sensorial technology of “seeing” in the kind of narrative this tourism engenders. Beginning in 1950, the newly established People’s Republic of China launched an annual tradition of inv...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Uradyn E. Bulag
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2012-01-01
Series:Journal of Current Chinese Affairs
Subjects:
300
320
Online Access:http://hup.sub.uni-hamburg.de/giga/jcca/article/view/577
Description
Summary:This paper outlines the operation of what may be called “political tourism” in China, and analyses the role of the sensorial technology of “seeing” in the kind of narrative this tourism engenders. Beginning in 1950, the newly established People’s Republic of China launched an annual tradition of inviting non-communist elites to attend the May Day and the National Day (1 October) parades on Tiananmen Square in Beijing and in some metropolitan cities. Unlike contemporary ethnic tourism, wherein minorities and their cultures become the objects of the tourist gaze, Chinese political tourism aims at bringing minority leaders out of their putative “isolation”, treating them with hospitality, and ultimately making them “see with their own eyes” China’s “true face”.
ISSN:1868-1026
1868-4874