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Educated into Sinophilia? How Kazakh graduates/students of Chinese universities perceive China
[journal article]
Abstract This article examines perceptions of China and contributes to the ongoing academic debate on Sinophobia in Central Asia. However, unlike existing studies, it specifically focuses on perceptions of those, who have first-hand China experience - Kazakh students/graduates of Chinese universities. Based ... view more
This article examines perceptions of China and contributes to the ongoing academic debate on Sinophobia in Central Asia. However, unlike existing studies, it specifically focuses on perceptions of those, who have first-hand China experience - Kazakh students/graduates of Chinese universities. Based on in-depth interviews with them, the article argues that those with first-hand China experience tend to reject the China threat theory, found to be widespread among the general population. Instead, China-educated Kazakh youth perceive China mostly as an economic opportunity for their own country. Yet, this does not necessarily make them Sinophiles in the sense that they still express certain concerns related to their country's potential over-dependence on China. But more interestingly, they see China as the "civilizational other." This perceived civilisational abyss even among the more-informed segments of the population appears to be one of the main causes of the alienation of China and the Chinese in Kazakhstan.... view less
Keywords
Kazakhstan; Central Asia; female student; student; graduate; China; stereotype; alienation; stereotype; attitude
Classification
Political Process, Elections, Political Sociology, Political Culture
Document language
English
Publication Year
2023
Page/Pages
p. 334-353
Journal
Journal of Current Chinese Affairs, 52 (2023) 2
ISSN
1868-4874
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed