ABSTRACT

Considering the African presence in China from an ethnographic and cultural studies perspective, this book offers a new way to theorise contemporary and future forms of transnational mobilities while expanding our understandings around the transformations happening in both China and Africa. The author develops an original argument and new theoretical insights about the significance of the African presence in Guangzhou, and presents an invaluable case study for understanding particular modes of transnational mobility. More broadly, it challenges forms of (re)presenting and producing knowledge about subjects on the move; and it transforms existing theorisations and critical understandings of mobility and its shaping power. Through an ethnographic approach, the book brings us closer to a number of practices, features and objects that, while characterising the lives of Africans in Guangzhou, are also evidence of the interplay between individual aspirations, and the structural constraints embedded in contemporary regimes of transnational mobility. Raising critical questions about ways of (un)belonging in the precarious settings of neoliberal modernity and the future of African mobilities, this book will be of interest to scholars of transnational, African and Chinese Studies.

chapter |23 pages

Introduction

Foreigners in China

chapter 1|36 pages

The emergence of the ‘Chocolate City’

Multiethnic spaces, catering networks, and articulated subeconomies

chapter 2|19 pages

The materialities of transnational movement

Food, hair, fashion, movies, and other ‘things’

chapter 3|31 pages

Placemaking in Guangzhou

Emplacement, transiency, and the ‘politics’ of solidarity

chapter 4|28 pages

Making it on the move

Landscapes of aspiration in Guangzhou’s African music scene

chapter 5|20 pages

Transnational flows

Gendered and racialised imaginaries of Africans in Guangzhou

chapter 6|20 pages

Embedded transnationality

Problematic transnational mobilities, the burden of methodological nationalism

chapter |2 pages

Postscript

African transnational mobility in post-COVID-19 pandemic Guangzhou