ABSTRACT

European-East Asian Borders is an international, trans-disciplinary volume that breaks new ground in the study of borders and bordering practices in global politics. It explores the insights and limitations of border theory developed primarily in the European context to a range of historical and contemporary border-related issues and phenomena in East Asia.

The essays presented here question, rather than assume, the various borders between inclusion/exclusion, here/there, us/them, that condition the (im)possibility of translating between histories, cultures and identities. Contributors suggest that the act of translation offers new ways of thinking about how border logics operate, taking on the concept of translation itself as border problematic and therefore raising questions of power and authority, such as who gets to act as a translator, or who benefits from the outcome.

The book will appeal not only to upper-level students and scholars with a geopolitical-historical interest in East Asia, but also to those who work in the inter-disciplinary field of border studies and others with an interest more generally in translation and the extent to which theory ‘travels’ across time and space.

chapter |11 pages

Introduction

Translating borders, deconstructing “Europe/East Asia” 1

chapter 1|26 pages

The figure of translation

Translation as a filter?

chapter 2|25 pages

The Taiwan question

Border consciousness intervened, inverted and displaced

chapter 3|16 pages

Knowledge production as “bordering” practices

Historical and political knowledge in the discursive constitution of Taiwanese national identity 1

chapter 4|19 pages

Traversing the dispositif

The dispute over the Diaoyutai islands revisited 1

chapter 5|15 pages

Facing the sea, becoming the West

The imagination of maritime nation and discourses of Asia in Japan 1

chapter 6|20 pages

Maritime borders and territories

A topological space of exception and the suspicious vessel case in Japan 1

chapter 7|14 pages

Translating “unity in diversity”

The predicament of ethnicity in China's diaspora politics 1

chapter 9|16 pages

Bordering on the unacceptable in China and Europe

“Cao ni ma” and “nique ta mère” 1