New Directions in Africa–China Studies

دانلود کتاب New Directions in Africa–China Studies

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کتاب جهت گیری های جدید در مطالعات آفریقا و چین نسخه زبان اصلی

دانلود کتاب جهت گیری های جدید در مطالعات آفریقا و چین بعد از پرداخت مقدور خواهد بود
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توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب New Directions in Africa–China Studies

نام کتاب : New Directions in Africa–China Studies
ویرایش : 1
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : جهت گیری های جدید در مطالعات آفریقا و چین
سری :
نویسندگان : ,
ناشر : Routledge
سال نشر : 2018
تعداد صفحات : 369
ISBN (شابک) : 2017054624 , 9781138714670
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 8 مگابایت



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فهرست مطالب :


Cover\nHalf Title\nTitle Page\nCopyright Page\nTable of Contents\nList of illustrations\nList of contributors\nAcknowledgements\nPreface: New Directions in Africa–China Studies\nList of abbreviations\nIntroduction\n 1. Studying Africa and China\n The evolution of China–Africa studies: one account\n New momentum: FOCAC VI and Chinese foreign policy under Xi Jinping\n Themes and sub-fields\n China–Africa: a field of study?\n Area Studies and beyond\n Africa in China studies, China in African studies\n Power-knowledge\n Knowledge production\n Aims of the book\n Overview of chapters\n Notes\n References\nFrom China in Africa to global African studies\n 2. From field work to academic field: Personal reflections on China–Africa research\n The beginnings: Africa as a gateway to China\n Operationalizing research on China–Africa\n Field research\n Tanzania: the laboratory\n Persistent questions in China–Africa research\n Conclusion\n Note\n References\n 3. African studies in China in the twenty-first century: A historiographical survey\n China-–Africa relations\n Country studies\n Current situation\n Monographs and achievements\n Annual report, memoirs and references\n Conclusion\n Notes\n Bibliography\n 4. Themes and thoughts in Africanists’ discourse about China and Africa\n Terms of engagement in the Africanist debate about China–Africa relations\n Raw materials, loads of money, and corrupt deals\n The cultural imperative in the China–Africa matrix\n Confucianism as the basis of China–Africa relations?\n Conclusion\n Notes\n References\n 5. Media as a site of contestation in China–Africa relations\n Context: China–Africa media relations\n Survey of China–Africa media research\n Looking forward\n China–Africa and media practices\n Future China–Africa media relations from a topic perspective\n Conclusion\n Notes\n References\n 6. “China in Africa” in the Anthropocene: A discourse of divergence in a converging world\n The Euro-American construction of “China in Africa”\n China (and the world) in Africa\n We’re all in this together: global capital in the Age of the Anthropocene\n Research implications\n Notes\n References\n 7. Doing ethnography beyond China: The ethic of the ignorant foreigner\n The ethnographic encounter\n The ethic of the ignorant foreigner\n Research conversations and ethnography as remembrance\n Toward a new direction in doing ethnography\n Note\n References\n 8. Global African studies and locating China\n Autobiography\n Archives\n Area Studies to global studies? Navigating the twenty-first century\n The way forward: a new initiative?\n Notes\n References\nViews from downstairs: ethnography, identity, and agency\n 9. Chinese peanuts and Chinese machinga: The use and abuse of a rumour in Dar es Salaam (and ethnographic writing)\n Seeing like an ethnographer: peanuts as indices\n Seeing like a Chinese manager: peanuts as possibility\n Seeing like a Tanzanian diplomat: who does the peanut speak for?\n Seeing like a peanut\n Conclusion\n Notes\n References\n 10. Reflections on the role of race in China–Africa relations\n Chinese in Africa\n Africans in China\n Conclusion\n Notes\n References\n 11. Kenyan agency in Kenya–China relations: Contestation, cooperation and passivity\n Agency as the safeguard of governance\n Arenas\n Actors\n Motivations\n Modalities\n Conclusion\n Notes\n References\n 12. Bureaucratic agency and power asymmetry in Benin–China relations\n Evolution of Benin-China relations\n China: a key actor in the development of Benin’s infrastructure projects\n Tracing the negotiation process\n Who negotiates within the bureaucracies?\n Comparative case studies and multi-dimensional bureaucratic agency\n Bureaucratic agency in asymmetrical negotiations\n Conclusion\n Notes\n References\n 13. Dependency and underdevelopment: The case of the Special Economic Zone in Mauritius\n Traditional dependency\n Contemporary relevance of dependency theory\n China: metropolis or satellite?\n Africa: the ultimate satellite\n The Chinese SEZ in Mauritius\n Evaluation of JFET’s development elements\n A traditional dependency reading of JFET\n The actual dependency exercise in JFET\n Conclusion\n Notes\n References\n 14. Ivory trails: Divergent values of ivory and elephants in Africa and Asia\n Congo River basin: elephant crisis, elephant values\n Entanglements: values of elephants and ivory in Asian markets\n Paradoxes\n Conclusion\n Notes\n References\nViews from upstairs: elites, policy and political economy\n 15. Neo-patrimonialism and extraversion in China’s relations with Angola and Mozambique: Is Beijing making a difference?\n Extraversion and patrimonialism in Africa\n Historical patterns of extraversion and patrimonialism in Angola and Mozambique\n China-Angola: fuelling extraversion and neo-patrimonialism through oil-backed credit lines?\n China-Mozambique: fuelling neo-patrimonialism and extraversion through business collusion?\n Conclusion\n Notes\n References\n 16. Between resource extraction and industrializing Africa\n Some discursive considerations\n China’s entry: the nature of debates\n Conclusion\n References\n 17. A Chinese model for Africa: Problem-solving, learning and limits\n Models, learning and meaning\n China–Africa and the role of models\n The Chinese development model as catalyst for a rising Africa\n The limits of Chinese solutions to African problems\n Conclusion\n Notes\n References\n 18. New Structural Economics: A first attempt at theoretical reflections on China–Africa engagement and its limitations\n Notes\n References\n 19. China, Africa, and global economic transformation\n Contours of Chinese outward investment in Africa\n Domestic dynamics of China’s capital export\n From geoeconomics to geopolitics\n China’s capital export in regional-comparative perspective\n Conclusion\n References\n 20. China and African security\n Context\n Drivers of China’s security engagement in Africa\n China–Africa security relations in theoretical context\n Development–Security\n Future directions\n Conclusion: toward Africa–China security studies\n Notes\n References\nConclusion\n 21. Conclusion\n Western Topiary in the Garden of Solidarity: post-colonialism revisited\n Lost voices found and agency discovered: a new archeology of knowledge\n Beyond and beneath Area Studies\n China as champion of globalisation: a world after its own image?\n Concluding thoughts\n Notes\n References\nIndex




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