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Das, Mukta (2018) Spicing the China Dream : South Asians, Food And Belonging in Guangzhou, Hong Kong and Macau. PhD thesis. SOAS University of London. DOI: https://doi.org/10.25501/SOAS.00032242

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Abstract

This thesis evaluates whether South Asians in the Pearl River Delta can belong to a multicultural China. As China ascends to the role of world's leading superpower in the 21st Century and comes to terms with its identity as an immigrant-receiving country, this thesis argues that South Asians in Guangzhou, Hong Kong and Macau use food to belong to the ordinary community (Garner 2007) as a way to belong to the region. The strategies they pursue and the work that they do with food both marks and unmarks their racial identity. But strategies also highlight class, locality and religion, creating a South Asian culinary identity ambiguous enough to move them into a fragmented Cantonese mainstream. These strategies are viable in a delta region that is 96% Chinese, with enduring but also equivocal beliefs in racial hierarchies, and an oftentimes productive blind spot concerning South Asian identity. Guangzhou, Hong Kong and Macau also deploy a politicised ethnolinguistic cultural identity at different scales in order to secure better political outcomes from China's central government in Beijing. Whether ignored, embraced or rejected, South Asian cooks and food attend to these distinctions in highly networked spaces such as grocery stores and restaurants, to more civic spaces such as food festivals and heritage projects. I identify with my three-city field site in the same way that my South Asian interlocutors do, as a multi-sited reality (Hage 2005). In this reality resources, such as historical claims, money, ingredients, cooks, and ideas of good taste and a good life in one site are called upon to aid or to hinder strategies in another. The thesis is based on twelve months of fieldwork, following this circulation of resources in archives, grocery backrooms, queues at the border, professional and home kitchens, festival stalls and government offices.

Item Type: Theses (PhD)
SOAS Departments & Centres: Departments and Subunits > Department of Anthropology & Sociology
SOAS Research Theses
Supervisors Name: Jacob Klein
DOI (Digital Object Identifier): https://doi.org/10.25501/SOAS.00032242
Date Deposited: 30 Jan 2020 11:23
URI: https://eprints.soas.ac.uk/id/eprint/32242

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