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Chinese nationalism

Chinese nationalism is a form of nationalism in which asserts that the Chinese people are a nation and promotes the cultural and national unity of all Chinese people. According to Sun Yat-sen's philosophy in the Three Principles of the People, Chinese nationalism is evaluated as multi-ethnic nationalism, which should be distinguished from Han nationalism.

At the beginning of the 20th century, the sentiment of nationalism in China rose sharply, represented by the May Fourth Movement in 1919
Chinese nationalism
Traditional Chinese中國民族主義
Simplified Chinese中国民族主义
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinZhōngguó mínzú zhǔyì
Bopomofoㄓㄨㄥ ㄍㄨㄛˊ ㄇㄧㄣˊ ㄗㄨˊ ㄓㄨˇ ㄧˋ
Alternative Chinese name
Traditional Chinese中華民族主義
Simplified Chinese中华民族主义
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinZhōnghuá mínzú zhǔyì
Bopomofoㄓㄨㄥ ㄏㄨㄚˊ ㄇㄧㄣˊ ㄗㄨˊ ㄓㄨˇ ㄧˋ

Modern Chinese nationalism emerged in the late Qing dynasty (1636–1912) in response to the humiliating defeat in the First Sino-Japanese War and the invasion and pillaging of Beijing by the Eight-Nation Alliance. In both cases, the aftermath forced China to pay financial reparations and grant special privileges to foreigners. The nationwide image of China as a superior Celestial Empire at the center of the universe was shattered, and last-minute efforts to modernize the old system were unsuccessful. These last-minute efforts were best exemplified by Liang Qichao, a late Qing reformer who failed to reform the Qing government in 1896 and was later expelled to Japan, where he began work on his ideas of Chinese nationalism.

The effects of World War I continually shaped Chinese nationalism. Despite joining the Allied Powers, China was again severely humiliated by the Versailles Treaty of 1919 which transferred the special privileges given to Germany to the Empire of Japan. This resulted in the May Fourth Movement of 1919, which developed into nationwide protests that saw a surge of Chinese nationalism. Large-scale military campaigns led by the Kuomintang during the Warlord Era that overpowered provincial warlords and sharply reduced special privileges for foreigners helped further strengthen and aggrandize a sense of Chinese national identity.

The current national flag of the People's Republic of China (1949–present), representing a variety of Chinese nationalism. Currently in use in mainland China, Hong Kong and Macau. Closely associated with the Chinese Communist Party (CCP)
The second national flag of the Republic of China (1928–present), representing a variety of Chinese nationalism. Defunct in mainland China post-1949. Currently in use in the Taiwan Area of the Republic of China. Closely associated with the Kuomintang (KMT), also known as the Chinese Nationalist Party

After the Empire of Japan was defeated by Allies in World War II, Chinese nationalism again gained traction as China recovered lost territories previously lost to Japan before the war, including Northeast area and the island of Taiwan. However, the Chinese Civil War, (which had paused in the face of Japanese invasion) had resumed, damaging the image of a unified Chinese identity. The Communists were victorious in 1949, as the Kuomintang retreated to Taiwan. Under Mao Zedong, the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) began to employ Chinese nationalism as a political tool. Using Chinese nationalism, the CCP began to suppress separatism and secessionist attitudes in Tibet, Inner Mongolia, and among the Uyghurs, a Turkic minority in the far-west province of Xinjiang, an issue that persists. In modern times, especially due to changing US-China relations, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the People's Republic of China often cite ideas of Chinese nationalism when responding to press questions on the topic.[citation needed]

Historical development edit

 
Qing dynasty illustration of Yue Fei who led Chinese Southern Song army against Jurchens
 
Portrait of the Hongwu Emperor, who led Chinese movement against Mongol Yuan dynasty

The first state of China was confirmed as the Shang dynasty (c. 1570 BC-c. 1045 BC). The Chinese concept of the world was largely a division between the civilized world and the barbarian world and there was little concept of the belief that Chinese interests were served by a powerful Chinese state. Commenter Lucian Pye has argued that the modern "nation state" is fundamentally different from a traditional empire, and argues that dynamics of the current People's Republic of China (PRC) – a concentration of power at a central point of authority – share an essential similarity with the Ming and Qing Empires.[1]

Chinese nationalism as it emerged in the early 20th century was based on the experience of Japanese nationalism, especially as viewed and interpreted by Sun Yat-sen. In 1894, Sun founded the Revive China Society, which was the first Chinese nationalist revolutionary society.[2]: 31 

Chinese nationalism was rooted in the long historic tradition of China as the center of the world, in which all other states were offshoots and owed some sort of deference. That sense of superiority underwent a series of terrible shocks in the 19th century, including large-scale internal revolts, and more grievously the systematic gaining and removal of special rights and privileges by foreign nations who proved their military superiority during the First and Second Opium Wars, based on modern technology that was lacking in China. It was a matter of humiliation one after another, the loss of faith in the Qing Dynasty. By the 1890s, disaffected Chinese intellectuals began to develop "a new nationalist commitment to China as a nation-state in a world dominated by predatory imperialist nation states."[3] Overall, their concern was not in preserving a traditional Chinese order but instead the construction of a strong state and society that could stand in a hostile international arena.[3] Unlike many nationalist projects in other countries, the trend among Chinese intellectuals was to regard tradition as unsuitable for China's survival and instead to view tradition as a source of China's problems.[4]

China's defeat by Japan in the 1894-1895 First Sino-Japanese war was fundamental to the development of the first generation of Chinese nationalists.[5] The most dramatic watershed came in 1900, in the wake of the invasion, capture, and pillaging of the national capital by an eight-nation coalition that punished China for the Boxer Rebellion.[6] Ethnic nationalism was, in any case, unacceptable to the ruling Manchu elite – they were foreigners who conquered China and maintained their own language and traditions. Most citizens had multiple identities, of which the locality was more important than the nation as a whole.[7] Anyone who wanted to rise in government non-military service had to be immersed in Confucian classics, and pass a very difficult test. If accepted, they would be rotated around the country, so the bureaucrats did not identify with the locality. The depth of two-way understanding and trust developed by European political leaders and their followers did not exist.[8]

Chinese nationalists drew inspiration from Japan's victory in Japan's victory in the Russo-Japanese War, which they broadly viewed as demonstrating the fallacy of a European-centric racial hierarchy.[2]: 30 

The Second Sino-Japanese war was one of the most important events in the modern construction of Chinese nationalism.[9] The Chinese experience in the war helped create an ideology based on the concept of “the people” as a political body in its own right, “a modern nation as opposed to a feudal empire.”[9]

Ideological sources edit

 
This abdication decree announced the fall of the Qing Dynasty and the succession of the Republic of China, marking the success of the 1911 Revolution
 
Yuan Shikai, a nationalist in the Beiyang Government
 
Liang Qichao, who greatly contributed to creating the foundation of modern Chinese nationalism

The discussion of modern Chinese nationalism has dominated many political and intellectual debates since the late nineteenth century. Political scientist Suisheng Zhao argues that nationalism in China is not monolithic but exists in various forms, including political, liberal, ethnical, and state nationalism.[10] Over the first half of the twentieth century, Chinese nationalism has constituted a crucial part of many political ideologies, including the anti-Manchuism during the 1911 Revolution, the anti-imperialist sentiment of the May Fourth Movement in 1919, and the Maoist thoughts that guided the Communist Revolution in 1949. The origin of modern Chinese nationalism can be traced back to the intellectual debate on race and nation in late nineteenth century. Shaped by the global discourse of social Darwinism, reformers and intellectuals debated how to build a new Chinese national subject based on a proper racial order, particularly the Manchu-Han relations.[11] After the collapse of the Qing regime and the founding of the Republic of China in 1911, concerns of both domestic and international threat made the role of racism decline, while anti-imperialism became the new dominant ideology of Chinese nationalism over the 1910s. While intellectuals and elites advocated their distinctive thoughts on Chinese nationalism, political scientist Chalmers Johnson has pointed out that most of these ideas had very little to do with China's majority population—the Chinese peasantry. He thus proposes to supplement the ideology of the Chinese Communist Party in the discussion of Chinese nationalism, which he labels "peasant nationalism."[12]

 
Wang Jingwei

In the 19th century, significant development of the Chinese national identity resulted from an attempt in some revolutionary circles to negatively identify themselves against the Qing dynasty, which in their view was non-Chinese.[13]: 18  Under this initial view of Chinese nationalism, the Chinese identity was primarily associated with the majority Han ethnic group.[13]: 18 

After Qing's defeat in the Sino-Japanese War of 1895, reformers and intellectuals debated how to strengthen the nation, the discussion of which centered on the issue of race. Liang Qichao, a late Qing reformist who participated in the Hundred Days' Reform of 1898, contended that the boundary between Han and Manchu must be erased (ping Man-Han zhi jie).[14] Liang was among the most prominent nationalists who viewed earlier conceptions of a Han-focused national identity as too restrictive.[13]: 18  Liang attributed the decline of China to the Qing dynasty ruled by the Manchus, who treated the Han as an "alien race" and imposed a racial hierarchy between the Han and the Manchus while ignoring the threat of imperial powers.[15] However Liang's critique of the Qing court and the Manchu-Han relations laid the foundation for anti-Manchuism, an ideology that early Republican and nationalist revolutionaries advocated in their efforts to overthrow the Qing dynasty and found a new Republic in China. More broadly, Liang's view was that modernity was "an age of struggle among nations for the survival of the fittest" and that therefore the Qing government should support industrialization and develop a Chinese people with strong work ethic, "a strong sense of nationalism, and a militaristic mentality."[16]: 22 

In his writing "Revolutionary Army," Zou Rong, an active Chinese revolutionary at the turn of the twentieth century, demanded a revolution education for the Han people who were suffering from the oppression of the Manchu rule.[17] He argued that China should be a nation of the orthodox Han Chinese and no alien race shall rule over them. According to Zou, the Han Chinese, as the descendants of the Yellow Emperor, must overthrow the Manchu rule to restore their legitimacy and rights. Wang Jingwei, a Chinese revolutionary who later became an important figure in the Kuomintang, also believed that the Manchus were an inferior race. Wang contended that a state consisting of a single race would be superior to those multiracial ones. Most of the Republican revolutionaries agreed that preserving the race was vital to the survival of the nation. Since the Han had asserted its dominant role in Chinese nationalism, the Manchus had to be either absorbed or eradicated.[18] Historian Prasenjit Duara summarized this by stating that the Republican revolutionaries primarily drew on the international discourse of "racist evolutionism" to envision a "racially purified China."[18]

 
Dr. Sun Yat-sen, founder of the Kuomintang

After the 1911 Revolution, Sun Yat-sen established the Republic of China, the national flag of which contained five colors with each symbolizing a major racial ethnicity of China. This marked a shift from the earlier discourse of radical racism and assimilation of the non-Han groups to the political autonomy of the five races.[19] The rhetorical move, as China historian Joseph Esherick points out, was based on the practical concerns of both imperial threats from the international environment and conflicts on the Chinese frontiers.[20] While both Japan and Russia were encroaching China, the newly born republic also faced ethnic movements in Mongolia and Tibet which claimed themselves to be part of the Qing Empire rather than the Republic of China. Pressured by both domestic and international problems, the fragile Republican regime decided to maintain the borders of the Qing Empire to keep its territories intact.[20] With the increasing threat from the imperialist powers in the 1910s, anti-imperialist sentiments started to grow and spread in China. An ideal of "a morally just universe," anti-imperialism made racism appear shameful and thus took over its dominant role in the conceptualization of Chinese nationalism.[21] Yet racism never perished. Instead, it was embedded by other social realms, including the discourse of eugenics and racial hygiene.[22]

The Blue Shirts Society, a fascist paramilitary organization within the Kuomintang that modelled itself after Mussolini's blackshirts of the National Fascist Party, was anti-foreign and anti-communist, and it stated that its agenda was to expel foreign (Japanese and Western) imperialists from China, crush Communism, and eliminate feudalism.[23] In addition to being anticommunist, some KMT members, like Chiang Kai-shek's right-hand man Dai Li were anti-American, and wanted to expel American influence.[24] In addition, the close Sino-German relations at the time promoted close ties between the Nationalist Government and Nazi Germany. The New Life Movement was a government-led civic movement in 1930s China initiated by Chiang Kai-shek to promote cultural reform and Neo-Confucian social morality and to ultimately unite China under a centralized ideology following the emergence of ideological challenges to the status quo. The Movement attempted to counter threats of Western and Japanese imperialism through a resurrection of traditional Chinese morality, which it held to be superior to modern Western values. As such the Movement was based upon Confucianism, mixed with Christianity, nationalism and authoritarianism that have some similarities to fascism.[25] It rejected individualism and liberalism, while also opposing socialism and communism. Some historians regard this movement as imitating Nazism and being a neo-nationalistic movement used to elevate Chiang's control of everyday lives. Frederic Wakeman suggested that the New Life Movement was "Confucian fascism".[26]

In response to the Cultural Revolution, Chiang Kai-shek promoted a Chinese Cultural Renaissance movement which followed in the steps of the New Life Movement, promoting Confucian values.[27]

In addition to anti-Manchurism and anti-imperialism, political scientist Chalmers Johnson has argued that the rise of power of the CCP through its alliance with the peasantry should also be understood as "a species of nationalism."[28] Johnson observes that social mobilization, a force that unites people to form a political community together, is the "primary tool" for conceptualizing nationalism.[29] In the context of social mobilization, Chinese nationalism only fully emerged during the Second Sino-Japanese War (1937–1945), when the CCP mobilized the peasantry to fight against the Japanese invaders. Johnson contends that early nationalism of the Kuomintang was quite similar to the late nineteenth-century nationalism in Europe, as both referred to the search for their national identities and positions in the modern world by the intelligentsia.[30] He argues that nationalism constructed by the intellectuals is not identical to nationalism based on mass mobilization, as the nationalist movements led by the Kuomintang, as well as the May Fourth Movement in 1919, were not mass movements because their participants were only a small proportion of the society where the peasants were simply absent. When the Second Sino-Japanese War broke out in 1937, the CCP began to mobilize the Chinese peasantry through mass propaganda of national salvation (Chinese: 救國; pinyin: Jiùguó) Johnson observed that the primary shift of the CCP's post-1937 propaganda was its focus on the discourse of national salvation and the temporary retreat of its Communist agenda on class struggle and land redistribution.[31] The wartime alliance of the Chinese peasantry and the CCP manifests how the nationalist ideology of the CCP, or the peasant nationalism, reinforced the desire of the Chinese to save and build a strong nation.[32]

Irredentism and expansionism have also played a role in Chinese nationalism, declaring that China should regain its "lost territories" and form a Greater China.[33][34] To this day, the Republic of China maintains its territorial claims since its inception in 1912. Its territorial claims were inherited from the Great Qing government as part of the Imperial Edict of the Abdication of the Qing Emperor.

Ethnicity edit

 
Chinese nationalist leaders Chiang Kai-shek (left) and Dr. Sun Yat-sen (right).
 
The Great Wall, a national symbol of China
 
A drawing of Hong Xiuquan, leader of Taiping Rebellion against Qing dynasty

Defining the relationship between ethnicity and the Chinese identity has been a very complex issue throughout Chinese history. In the 17th century, with the help of Ming Chinese rebels, the Manchus conquered China proper and set up the Qing dynasty. Over the next centuries, they would incorporate groups such as the Tibetans, the Mongols, and the Uyghurs into territories which they controlled. The Manchus were faced with the issue of maintaining loyalty among the people they ruled while at the same time maintaining a distinctive identity. The main method by which they accomplished control of the Chinese heartland was by portraying themselves as enlightened Confucian sages part of whose goal was to preserve and advance Chinese civilization. Over the course of centuries the Manchus were gradually assimilated into the Chinese culture and eventually many Manchus identified themselves as a people of China.[citation needed]

The Chinese nation has also been referred to as descendants of Yandi and Huangdi, who were legendary historical ancestors of the Huaxia people, who were ancestral to the Han Chinese.[35][36]

The complexity of the relationship between ethnicity and the Chinese identity is best exemplified during the Taiping Rebellion in which the rebels fought fiercely against the Manchus on the ground that they were barbarian foreigners while at the same time others fought just as fiercely on behalf of the Manchus on the grounds that they were the preservers of traditional Chinese values.

 
Soldiers of the Yihetuan.

The Yihetuan, also known as the Boxers, were a Chinese nationalist and pro-Qing monarchist secret society who initiated the Boxer Rebellion from 1899 to 1901. Their motivations were Anti-Christianism and resistance to Westernisation. The Boxers at their peak were supported by some elements of the Imperial Army. Their slogan was "Support the Qing, destroy foreigners!".[37]

In 1909, the Law of Nationality of Great Qing (Chinese: 大清國際條例; pinyin: Dà qīng guójì tiáolì) was published by the Manchu government, which defined Chinese with the following rules: 1) born in China while his/her father is a Chinese; 2) born after his/her father's death while his/her father is a Chinese at his death; 3) his/her mother is a Chinese while his/her father's nationality is unclear or stateless.[38]

In 1919, the May Fourth Movement grew out of student protests to the Treaty of Versailles, especially its terms allowing Japan to keep territories surrendered by Germany after the Siege of Tsingtao, and spurned upsurges of Chinese nationalism amongst the protests.[citation needed]

The official Chinese nationalistic view in the 1920s and 1930s was heavily influenced by modernism and social Darwinism, and included advocacy of the cultural assimilation of ethnic groups in the western and central provinces into the "culturally advanced" Han state, to become in name as well as in fact members of the Chinese nation. Furthermore, it was also influenced by the fate of multi-ethnic states such as Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman Empire. It also became a very powerful force during the Japanese occupation of Coastal China during the 1930s and 1940s and the atrocities committed then.[citation needed]

With the 1911 Revolution and the appearance of modern nationalist theories, "Zhonghua minzu" in the early Republic of China, referred to the Five Races Under One Union concept. This principle held that the five major ethnicities in China, the Han Chinese, Manchus, Mongols, Hui, and Tibetans, all belonged to a single Chinese identity.[13]: 19  The government promoted Chinese nationalism for these five ethnic groups but with the Han Chinese are main ethnic group of "Zhonghua minzu" or China, this continued by Nationalist rule under Chiang Kai-shek and his Kuomintang in all China until the proclamation of the People's Republic of China in Chinese Mainland and the Republic of China retreated to Taiwan.

While initially rejected by Mao Zedong and his Chinese Communist Party, it later became accepted, the concept of "Chinese" created in Mao's period was "huge Chinese family" or a political union including the Han Chinese and 55 other ethnic groups.[39] Following the establishment of the People's Republic of China, the government extended the number of ethnicities comprising the Chinese nation to these 56.[13]: 19 

Before Xi Jinping took power, Chinese nationalism of the People's Republic of China was influenced strongly by the Soviet Korenizatsiya policy. The Chinese Communist Party also criticized that the Kuomintang-led Republic of China for supporting Han chauvinism. The official ideology of the People's Republic of China asserts that China is a multi-ethnic state, with the majority Han one of many ethnic groups of China, each of whose culture and language should be respected (akin to Soviet patriotism[40]). The government also instituted policies of affirmative action, in general, the ethnic policy of the People's Republic of China at the time was strongly influenced by the nature of its Marxist-Leninist state. Despite this official view, assimilationist attitudes remain deeply entrenched, and popular views and actual power relationships create a situation in which Chinese nationalism has in practice meant Han dominance of minority areas and peoples and assimilation of those groups.[citation needed] Since Xi Jinping took power, assimilation has been overt and intensified while preferential policies for ethnic minorities have shrunk.[41]

During the 1960s and 1970s, Chinese nationalism within mainland China became mixed with the rhetoric of Marxism, and nationalistic rhetoric become in large part subsumed into internationalist rhetoric. On the other hand, Chinese nationalism in Taiwan was primarily about preserving the ideals and lineage of Sun Yat-sen, the party he founded, the Kuomintang (KMT), and anti-Communism. While the definition of Chinese nationalism differed in the Republic of China (ROC) and PRC, both were adamant in claiming Chinese territories such as Senkaku (Diaoyutai) Islands.[citation needed]

In the 1990s, the dissolution of the Soviet Union, rising economic standards and the lack of any other legitimizing ideology, has led to what most observers see as a resurgence of nationalism within mainland China.[42]

Ethnic minorities edit

 
The 56 official ethnicities of the People's Republic of China

Chinese Muslims and Uyghurs edit

 
Hu Songshan, a Chinese Muslim Imam who was a Chinese nationalist.

Chinese Muslims have played an important role in Chinese nationalism. Chinese Muslims, known as Hui people, are a mixture of the descendants of foreign Muslims like Arabs and Persians, mixed with Han Chinese who converted to Islam. Chinese Muslims are sinophones, speaking Chinese and practicing Confucianism.[citation needed]

Hu Songshan, a Muslim Imam from Ningxia, was a Chinese nationalist and preached Chinese nationalism and unity of all Chinese people, and also against foreign imperialism and other threats to China's sovereignty.[43] He even ordered the Chinese Flag to be saluted during prayer, and that all Imams in Ningxia preach Chinese nationalism. Hu Songshan led the Ikhwan, the Chinese Muslim Brotherhood, which became a Chinese nationalist, patriotic organization, stressing education and independence of the individual.[43][44][45] Hu Songhan also wrote a prayer in Arabic and Chinese, praying for Allah to support the Chinese Kuomintang government and defeat Japan.[46] Hu Songshan also cited a Hadith (聖訓), a saying of the prophet Muhammad, which says "Loving the Motherland is equivalent to loving the Faith" (“愛護祖國是屬於信仰的一部份”). Hu Songshan harshly criticized those who were non-patriotic and those who taught anti-nationalist thinking, saying that they were fake Muslims.[citation needed]

Ma Qixi was a Muslim reformer, leader of the Xidaotang, and he taught that Islam could only be understood by using Chinese culture such as Confucianism. He read classic Chinese texts and even took his cue from Laozi when he decided to go on Hajj to Mecca.[citation needed]

Ma Fuxiang, a Chinese Muslim general and Kuomintang member, was another Chinese nationalist. Ma Fuxiang preached unity of all Chinese people, and even non-Han Chinese people such as Tibetans and Mongols to stay in China. He proclaimed that Mongolia and Tibet were part of the Republic of China, and not independent countries.[47] Ma Fuxiang was loyal to the Chinese government, and crushed Muslim rebels when ordered to. Ma Fuxiang believed that modern education would help Hui Chinese build a better society and help China resist foreign imperialism and help build the nation. He was praised for his "guojia yizhi"(national consciousness) by non-Muslims. Ma Fuxiang also published many books, and wrote on Confucianism and Islam, having studied both the Quran and the Spring and Autumn Annals.[citation needed]

Ma Fuxiang had served under the Chinese Muslim general Dong Fuxiang, and fought against the foreigners during the Boxer Rebellion.[48][49] The Muslim unit he served in was noted for being anti-foreign, being involved in shooting a Westerner and a Japanese to death before the Boxer Rebellion broke out.[50] It was reported that the Muslim troops were going to wipe out the foreigners to return a golden age for China, and the Muslims repeatedly attacked foreign churches, railways, and legations, before hostilities even started.[51] The Muslim troops were armed with modern repeater rifles and artillery, and reportedly enthusiastic about going on the offensive and killing foreigners. Ma Fuxiang led an ambush against the foreigners at Langfang and inflicted many casualties, using a train to escape. Dong Fuxiang was a xenophobe and hated foreigners, wanting to drive them out of China.[citation needed]

Various Muslim organizations in China like the Islamic Association of China and the Chinese Muslim Association were sponsored by the Kuomintang and the Chinese Communist Party.[citation needed]

Chinese Muslim imams had synthesized Islam and Confucianism in the Han Kitab. They asserted that there was no contradiction between Confucianism and Islam, and no contradiction between being a Chinese national and a Muslim. Chinese Muslim students returning from study abroad, from places such as Al-Azhar University in Egypt, learned about nationalism and advocated Chinese nationalism at home. One Imam, Wang Jingzhai, who studied at Mecca, translated a Hadith, or saying of Muhammad, "Aiguo Aijiao"- loving the country is equivalent to loving the faith. Chinese Muslims believed that their "Watan" Arabic: وطن, lit.'country; homeland' was the whole of the Republic of China, non-Muslims included.[52]

General Bai Chongxi, the warlord of Guangxi, and a member of the Kuomintang, presented himself as the protector of Islam in China and harbored Muslim intellectuals fleeing from the Japanese invasion in Guangxi. General Bai preached Chinese nationalism and anti-imperialism. Chinese Muslims were sent to Saudi Arabia and Egypt to denounce the Japanese. Translations from Egyptian writings and the Quran were used to support propaganda in favour of a Jihad against Japan.[52]

 
Ma Bufang, a Chinese Muslim general

Ma Bufang, a Chinese Muslim general who was part of the Kuomintang, supported Chinese nationalism and tolerance between the different Chinese ethnic groups. The Japanese attempted to approach him however their attempts at gaining his support were unsuccessful. Ma Bufang presented himself as a Chinese nationalist who fought against Western imperialism to the people of China in order to deflect criticism by opponents that his government was feudal and oppressed minorities like Tibetans and Buddhist Mongols. He presented himself as a Chinese nationalist to his advantage to keep himself in power as noted by the author Erden.[53][54]

In Xinjiang, the Chinese Muslim general Ma Hushan supported Chinese nationalism. He was chief of the 36th Division of the National Revolutionary Army. He spread anti-Soviet, and anti-Japanese propaganda, and instituted a colonial regime over the Uyghurs. Uyghur street names and signs were changed to Chinese, and the Chinese Muslim troops imported Chinese cooks and baths, rather than using Uyghur ones.[55] The Chinese Muslims even forced the Uyghur carpet industry at Khotan to change its design to Chinese versions.[56] Ma Hushan proclaimed his loyalty to Nanjing, denounced Sheng Shicai as a Soviet puppet, and fought against him in 1937.[55]

The Tungans (Chinese Muslims, Hui people) had anti-Japanese sentiment.[55]

General Ma Hushan's brother Ma Zhongying denounced separatism in a speech at Id Kah Mosque and told the Uyghurs to be loyal to the Chinese government at Nanjing.[57][58][59] The 36th division had crushed the Turkish Islamic Republic of East Turkestan, and the Chinese Muslim general Ma Zhancang beheaded the Uyghur emirs Abdullah Bughra and Nur Ahmad Jan Bughra.[60][59] Ma Zhancang abolished the Islamic Sharia law which was set up by the Uyghurs, and set up military rule instead, retaining the former Chinese officials and keeping them in power.[59] The Uyghurs had been promoting Islamism in their separatist government, but Ma Hushan eliminated religion from politics. Islam was barely mentioned or used in politics or life except as a vague spiritual focus for unified opposition against the Soviet Union.[55]

The Uyghur warlord Yulbars Khan was pro-China and supported the Republic of China.[61] The Uyghur politician Masud Sabri served as the governor of Xinjiang Province from 1947 to 1949.[62]

Tibetans edit

 
The People's Republic of China took over the capital Lhasa during its annexation by China in 1951

Pandatsang Rapga, a Tibetan politician, founded the Tibet Improvement Party with the goal of modernisation and integration of Tibet into the Republic of China.[63][64]

The 9th Panchen Lama, Thubten Choekyi Nyima, was considered extremely "pro-Chinese", according to official Chinese sources.[65][66][67]

Mongols edit

Many of the Chinese troops used to occupy Mongolia in 1919 were Chahar Mongols, which has been a major cause for animosity between Khalkhas and Inner Mongols.[68]

Manchus edit

In the late Qing Dynasty, revolutionaries incited anti-Manchuism to overthrow the Qing dynasty, especially Zou Rong.[69]

In Taiwan edit

 
Rally organized by the Chinese Unification Promotion Party in Taiwan.

One common goal of current Chinese government is the unification of mainland China and Taiwan. While this was the commonly stated goal of both the People's Republic of China and the Republic of China (Taiwan) before 1992, both sides differed sharply in the form of unification due to differences in political ideology.[citation needed]

In Taiwan, there is a general consensus to support the status quo of Taiwan's de facto independence as a separate nation. Despite this, the relationship between Chinese nationalism and Taiwan remains controversial, involving symbolic issues such as the use of the "Republic of China" as the official name of the government on Taiwan and the use of the word "China" in the name of government-owned corporations. There is little support in Taiwan for immediate unification. Overt support for formal independence is also muted due to the PRC's insistence on military action should Taiwan make such a formal declaration. The argument against unification is partly over culture and whether democratic Taiwanese should see themselves as Chinese or Taiwanese; and partly over mistrust of the authoritarian Chinese Communist Party (CCP), its human rights record, and its de-democratizing actions in Hong Kong (e.g. 2014–2015 Hong Kong electoral reform, which sparked the Umbrella Movement).[citation needed]

These misgivings are particularly prevalent among younger generations of Taiwanese, who generally consider themselves to have little or no connection to China.[70]

More radical Chinese nationalist groups in Taiwan include the Patriot Alliance Association founded in 1993[71][72] and the Chinese Unification Promotion Party founded by Taiwanese mafia leader Chang An-lo. The latter has been accused of violence against Hong Kong opposition figures such as Denise Ho and Lam Wing-kee.[73]

Nationalist symbology edit

 
A Chinese dragon on the Nine-Dragon Wall at the Forbidden City in Beijing. The dragon has been a prominent symbol of China for centuries.

In addition to the national symbols of China, the national symbols of the Republic of China, and the flags of China, there are many symbols opted for use by Chinese nationalists. Some of these include Chinese legendary or ancient figures such as the Yellow Emperor[13]: 19  and the Fire Emperor, Yu the Great, Qin Shi Huang, or more modern figures such as Sun Yat-sen, Chiang Kai-shek, or Mao Zedong. Another symbol often used is the Chinese dragon as a personification for the Chinese nation.

 
The plum blossom symbol in the Republic of China

Similar to the use of the chrysanthemum (which also has cultural significance in China) in Japan as the Imperial Seal of Japan, the plum blossom is also a national symbol of China, designated by the Legislative Yuan in the Republic of China on 21 July 1964.[74] It was also proposed to be the national flower of the People's Republic of China.[75] The Republic of China patriotic song The Plum Blossom revolves around its symbolism for China.

In the Republic of China, as the National Flower, the plum blossom symbolises:

  • Three buds and five petals – symbolises Three Principles of the People and the five branches of the Government in accordance with the Constitution
  • The plum blossom withstands the cold winter (it blossoms more in colder temperatures) – it symbolises the faithful, the resolute and the holy; it represents the national spirit of Republic of China nationals.
  • The five petals of the flower – symbolises Five Races Under One Union; it also symbolises Five Cardinal Relationships (Wǔlún), Five Constants (Wǔcháng) and Five Ethics (Wǔjiào) according to Confucian philosophy (national philosophy of imperial China for two millennia until 1912, when the Qing Dynasty was overthrown and the Republic of China was established)
  • The branches (枝橫), shadow (影斜), flexibility (曳疏), and cold resistance (傲霜) of the plum blossom also represent the four kinds of noble virtues, "originating and penetrating, advantageous and firm" mentioned in the I Ching (Book of Changes).[76]

Opposition edit

There are movements for regional secession from China and independence for Taiwan.

The Milk Tea Alliance formed by netizens from Hong Kong, Taiwan, and Thailand began as a reaction against Chinese nationalist commentators online.[77][78]

Elements of Japanese nationalism are hostile to China. In World War II, the Empire of Japan conquered large swathes of Chinese territory, and many contemporary nationalists in Japan deny the events of the Nanking Massacre.[79]

Northern and Southern edit

American scholar Edward Friedman has argued that there is a northern governmental, political, bureaucratic Chinese nationalism that is at odds with a southern, commercial Chinese nationalism.[80]

Populism edit

Populist nationalism is a comparatively late development in Chinese nationalism of the 1990s. It began to take recognizable shape after 1996, as a joint result of the evolving nationalist thinking of the early 1990s and the ongoing debates on modernity, postmodernism, postcolonialism, and their political implications-debates that have engaged many Chinese intellectuals since early 1995.[81]

Modern times edit

 
Chinese anti-Japan protest in Hong Kong in 2012, with protesters waving the flags of the PRC and ROC

During the Cold War era, American strategies to contain the spread of communism fueled nationalist sentiment in China, including as a result of the Korean War, the Taiwan Strait Crisis, the PRC's exclusion from the United Nations, and the U.S. embargo of China.[82]

The end of the Cold War has seen the revival throughout the world of nationalist sentiments and aspirations, nationalism is seen as increasing the legitimacy of Chinese Communist Party rule. It has been pursued in a more pragmatic and flexible manner compared to policies during the Cultural Revolution.[83] One remarkable phenomenon in the post-Cold War upsurge of Chinese nationalism is that Chinese intellectuals became one of the driving forces.[84] Many well-educated people-social scientists, humanities scholars, writers, and other professionals have given voice to and even become articulators for rising nationalistic discourse in the 1990s. Some commentators have proposed that "positive nationalism" could be an important unifying factor for the country as it has been for other countries.[85] China has also pursued ethno-nationalist policies aimed at appealing to its diaspora abroad.[86]

 
Anti-American protests in Nanjing following the U.S. bombing of the Chinese embassy in Belgrade, 1999

On 7 May 1999, during Operation Allied Force (NATO bombing of Yugoslavia), NATO aircraft bombed the Chinese embassy in Belgrade, Yugoslavia, killing three Chinese citizens. The US claimed that the bombing was an accident caused by the use of outdated maps but few Chinese accepted this explanation.[87] The incident caused widespread anger and following the attack Chinese officials described the bombing as a "barbarian act"[88] and a "war crime"[89] while Chinese students in Europe and America demonstrated against 'NATO fascism'.[87] In China thousands were involved in protest marches in Beijing and other provincial capitals, some protesters threw gas bombs and rocks at the diplomatic missions of the United States and other NATO countries[90] while in Chengdu the American Consul's residence was firebombed,[87] deepening anti-Western and anti-American sentiment in China. China, along with Russia, had already supported Slobodan Milošević and the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia during the Kosovo War,[91] and opposed NATO bombardment of Yugoslavia.[92]

 
Two Hanfu promoters at the Chinese Cultural Festival in Guangzhou

In the 21st century, notable spurs of grassroots Chinese nationalism grew from what the Chinese public saw as the marginalization of their country from Japan and the Western world. One such event occurred in the Hainan Island incident of April 1, 2001, in which a United States US EP-3 surveillance aircraft collided mid-air with a Chinese Shenyang J-8 jet fighter over the South China Sea.[93] China sought a formal apology, and President Jiang Zemin accepted United States Secretary of State Colin Powell's expression of "very sorry" as sufficient.[93] The incident nonetheless created negative feelings towards the United States by the Chinese public and increased public feelings of Chinese nationalism.[93]

The Japanese history textbook controversies, as well as Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi's visits to the Yasukuni Shrine was the source of considerable anger on Chinese blogs. In addition, the protests following the 2008 Tibetan unrest of the Olympic torch has gathered strong opposition within the Chinese community inside China and abroad. Almost every Tibetan protest on the Olympic torch route was met with a considerable pro-China protest. Because the 2008 Summer Olympics were a major source of national pride, anti-Olympics sentiments are often seen as anti-Chinese sentiments inside China. Moreover, the Sichuan earthquake in 2008 sparked a high sense of nationalism from the Chinese at home and abroad. The central government's quick response to the disaster was instrumental in galvanizing general support from the population amidst harsh criticism directed towards China's handling of the Lhasa riots only two months previously. In 2005, anti-Japanese demonstrations were held throughout Asia as a result of events such as the Japanese history textbook controversies. In 2012, Chinese people in mainland China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan held anti-Japanese protests due to the escalating Senkaku Islands dispute.[94]

Nationalism was witnessed at the 2008 Olympic torch relay where pro-Olympic protests were held by overseas Chinese in response to disruptions by anti-China activists in Paris and London.[95] At least 5,000 Chinese Americans including immigrants from mainland China, Hong Kong, Taiwan and Southeast Asia[96] also protested outside CNN's Hollywood offices after CNN commentator Jack Cafferty described Chinese products as "junk" and the Chinese as “goons” and “thugs” during a segment about China's relationship with America.[97][95] When the Olympic torch passed through Paris, a pro-Tibetan independence protestor attempted to snatch it from a young handicapped Chinese athlete who clung to it.[98] The images were widely televised and led to an internet rumor that accused French supermarket company Carrefour[98] of funding Tibetan independence groups.[99] Protests and calls for boycott resulted and ultimately subsided, in part because of efforts by French officials to apologize for the Paris torch attack.[99]

Another example of modern nationalism in China is the Hanfu movement, which is a Chinese movement in the early 21st century that seeks the revival of Chinese traditional clothing.[100]

The China–United States trade war also fueled nationalist sentiment among both CCP leadership and the general public.[101] The external pressure of the trade war allowed Xi Jinping to point to the United States' actions as a reason for China's economic slowdown.[101] The Chinese public responded.[101] Academic Suisheng Zhao summarizes, "Proud of their accomplishments through hard work, tremendous sacrifices, dogged determination, and well-crafted policies, many Chinese are fed up with US criticisms that China's rise is because it did not play by rules, violated international commitments, and tilted the playing field to advantage Chinese firms."[101]

Credit Suisse has determined through a 2018 survey that young Chinese consumers are turning to local brands as a result of growing nationalism. Local brands like Lenovo have also received backlash from some online Chinese for being unpatriotic.[102][103][104][105]

In 2021 Hannah Bailey, a researcher of Chinese internet censorship at the University of Oxford's Internet Institute, noted a shift in China's approach toward deriving legitimacy from nationalism, compared to the earlier approach based on its economic performance.[106]

Internet activism edit

In the 1990s, nationalists among the Chinese public were primarily connected through the internet.[107]

In 2005, twenty-two million Chinese netizens signed an internet petition in opposition to Japan's efforts to join the United Nations Security Council.[108]

In response to protests during the 2008 Olympic Torch Relay, the Chinese blogosphere became filled with nationalistic material, many of which highlighted perceived biases and inaccuracies in Western media such as photos of clashes between police and Tibetan independence protestors that took place in Nepal and India but captioned to seem as if the events happened in China.[109][110] One such site, Anti-CNN, claimed that news channels such as CNN and BBC pushed false narratives and only reported selectively in the 2008 Tibetan unrest.[111][109]

Chinese hackers have claimed to have attacked the CNN website numerous times, through the use of DDoS attacks.[112] Similarly, the Yasukuni Shrine website was hacked by Chinese hackers during late 2004, and another time on 24 December 2008.[113]

During the 2019–2020 Hong Kong protests, in response to protestors doxing police officers and people unsupportive of the protests, some Chinese nationalists in Hong Kong responded by doxing protestors.[114]

During the Russo-Ukrainian War (in particular the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine), nationalistic netizens disseminated pro-Russian sentiments and posted pro-Russian posts across the Chinese internet.[115]

Xi Jinping and the "Chinese Dream" edit

As Xi Jinping solidified his control after 2012, became the General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party, the CCP has used the phrase "Chinese Dream", to describe his overarching plans for China. Xi first used the phrase during a high-profile visit to the National Museum of China on 29 November 2012, where he and his Standing Committee colleagues were attending a "national revival" (民族复兴; more commonly translated "national rejuvenation" to differentiate from national awakening) exhibition. Since then, the phrase has become the signature political slogan of the Xi era.[116] In the public media, the Chinese Dream and nationalism are interwoven.[117] In diplomacy, the Chinese dream and nationalism have been closely linked to the Belt and Road Initiative. Peter Ferdinand argues that it thus becomes a dream about a future in which China "will have recovered its rightful place."[118]

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Further reading edit

  • Befu, Harumi. Cultural Nationalism in East Asia: Representation and Identity (1993). Berkeley, Calif.: Institute of East Asian Studies, University of California.
  • Cabestan, Jean-Pierre. "The many facets of Chinese nationalism." China perspectives (2005) 2005.59 online.
  • Chang, Maria Hsia. Return of the Dragon: China's Wounded Nationalism, (Westview Press, 2001), 256 pp, ISBN 0-8133-3856-5
  • Chow, Kai-Wing. "Narrating Nation, Race and National Culture: Imagining the Hanzu Identity in Modern China," in Chow Kai-Wing, Kevin M. Doak, and Poshek Fu, eds., Constructing nationhood in modern East Asia (2001). Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, pp. 47–84.
  • Gries, Peter Hays. China's New Nationalism: Pride, Politics, and Diplomacy, University of California Press (January 2004), hardcover, 224 pages, ISBN 0-520-23297-6
  • Duara, Prasenjit, "De-constructing the Chinese Nation," in Australian Journal of Chinese Affairs (July 1993, No. 30, pp. 1–26).
  • Duara, Prasenjit. Rescuing History from the Nation Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press, 1995.
  • Fitzgerald, John. Awakening China – Politics, Culture and Class in the Nationalist Revolution (1996). Stanford University Press.
  • He, Baogang. Nationalism, national identity and democratization in China (Routledge, 2018).
  • Hoston, Germaine A. The State, Identity, and the National Question in China and Japan (1994). Princeton UP.
  • Huang, Grace C. Chiang Kai-shek's Politics of Shame: Leadership, Legacy, and National Identity in China. Cambridge: Harvard University Asia Center, 2021.
  • Hughes, Christopher. Chinese Nationalism in the Global Era (2006).
  • Judge, Joan. "Talent, Virtue and Nation: Chinese Nationalism and Female Subjectivities in the Early Twentieth Century," American Historical Review 106#3 (2001) pp. 765–803. online
  • Karl, Rebecca E. Staging the World - Chinese Nationalism at the Turn of the Twentieth Century (Duke UP, 2002) excerpt
  • Leibold, James. Reconfiguring Chinese nationalism: How the Qing frontier and its indigenes became Chinese (Palgrave MacMillan, 2007).[ISBN missing]
  • Lust, John. "The Su-pao Case: An Episode in the Early Chinese Nationalist Movement," Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 27#2 (1964) pp. 408–429. online
  • Motyl, Alexander J. (2001). Encyclopedia of Nationalism, Volume II. Academic Press. ISBN 0-12-227230-7.
  • Nyíri, Pál, and Joana Breidenbach, eds. China Inside Out: Contemporary Chinese Nationalism and Transnationalism (2005) online 19 June 2020 at the Wayback Machine
  • Pye, Lucian W. "How China's nationalism was Shanghaied." Australian Journal of Chinese Affairs 29 (1993): 107–133.
  • Tan, Alexander C. and Boyu Chen."China's Competing and Co-opting Nationalisms: Implications to Sino-Japanese Relations." Pacific Focus (2013) 28#3 pp. 365–383). abstract
  • Tønnesson, Stein. "Will nationalism drive conflict in Asia?." Nations and Nationalism 22#2 (2016) online.
  • Unger, Jonathan, ed. Chinese nationalism (M, E. Sharpe, 1996).[ISBN missing]
  • Wang, Gungwu. The revival of Chinese nationalism (IIAS, International Institute for Asian Studies, 1996).
  • Wei, C.X. George and Xiaoyuan Liu, eds. Chinese Nationalism in Perspective: Historical and Recent Cases (2001) online
  • Zhang, Huijie, Fan Hong, and Fuhua Huang. "Cultural Imperialism, Nationalism, and the Modernization of Physical Education and Sport in China, 1840–1949." International Journal of the History of Sport 35.1 (2018): 43–60.
  • Zhao Suisheng. A Nation-State by Construction. Dynamics of Modern Chinese Nationalism (Stanford UP, 2004)[ISBN missing]
  • Harvard Asia Pacific Review, 2010. "Nations and Nationalism." Available at Issuu Harvard Asia Pacific Review 11.1 ISSN 1522-1113
  • Chinese Nationalism and Its Future Prospects, Interview with Yingjie Guo (27 June 2012)

External links edit

  •   Media related to Chinese nationalism at Wikimedia Commons

chinese, nationalism, this, article, about, nationalism, that, asserts, chinese, including, ethnic, minorities, nation, applied, exclusively, chinese, ethnicity, nationalism, diplomatic, system, ideology, that, emphasized, china, centrality, world, sinocentris. This article is about nationalism that asserts all Chinese including ethnic minorities are a nation For Chinese nationalism applied exclusively to the Han Chinese ethnicity see Han nationalism For the diplomatic system and ideology that emphasized China s centrality in the world see Sinocentrism For the political party commonly known as the Chinese Nationalist Party see Kuomintang Chinese nationalism is a form of nationalism in which asserts that the Chinese people are a nation and promotes the cultural and national unity of all Chinese people According to Sun Yat sen s philosophy in the Three Principles of the People Chinese nationalism is evaluated as multi ethnic nationalism which should be distinguished from Han nationalism At the beginning of the 20th century the sentiment of nationalism in China rose sharply represented by the May Fourth Movement in 1919Chinese nationalismTraditional Chinese中國民族主義Simplified Chinese中国民族主义TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinZhōngguo minzu zhǔyiBopomofoㄓㄨㄥ ㄍㄨㄛˊ ㄇㄧㄣˊ ㄗㄨˊ ㄓㄨˇ ㄧˋAlternative Chinese nameTraditional Chinese中華民族主義Simplified Chinese中华民族主义TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinZhōnghua minzu zhǔyiBopomofoㄓㄨㄥ ㄏㄨㄚˊ ㄇㄧㄣˊ ㄗㄨˊ ㄓㄨˇ ㄧˋModern Chinese nationalism emerged in the late Qing dynasty 1636 1912 in response to the humiliating defeat in the First Sino Japanese War and the invasion and pillaging of Beijing by the Eight Nation Alliance In both cases the aftermath forced China to pay financial reparations and grant special privileges to foreigners The nationwide image of China as a superior Celestial Empire at the center of the universe was shattered and last minute efforts to modernize the old system were unsuccessful These last minute efforts were best exemplified by Liang Qichao a late Qing reformer who failed to reform the Qing government in 1896 and was later expelled to Japan where he began work on his ideas of Chinese nationalism The effects of World War I continually shaped Chinese nationalism Despite joining the Allied Powers China was again severely humiliated by the Versailles Treaty of 1919 which transferred the special privileges given to Germany to the Empire of Japan This resulted in the May Fourth Movement of 1919 which developed into nationwide protests that saw a surge of Chinese nationalism Large scale military campaigns led by the Kuomintang during the Warlord Era that overpowered provincial warlords and sharply reduced special privileges for foreigners helped further strengthen and aggrandize a sense of Chinese national identity The current national flag of the People s Republic of China 1949 present representing a variety of Chinese nationalism Currently in use in mainland China Hong Kong and Macau Closely associated with the Chinese Communist Party CCP The second national flag of the Republic of China 1928 present representing a variety of Chinese nationalism Defunct in mainland China post 1949 Currently in use in the Taiwan Area of the Republic of China Closely associated with the Kuomintang KMT also known as the Chinese Nationalist PartyAfter the Empire of Japan was defeated by Allies in World War II Chinese nationalism again gained traction as China recovered lost territories previously lost to Japan before the war including Northeast area and the island of Taiwan However the Chinese Civil War which had paused in the face of Japanese invasion had resumed damaging the image of a unified Chinese identity The Communists were victorious in 1949 as the Kuomintang retreated to Taiwan Under Mao Zedong the Chinese Communist Party CCP began to employ Chinese nationalism as a political tool Using Chinese nationalism the CCP began to suppress separatism and secessionist attitudes in Tibet Inner Mongolia and among the Uyghurs a Turkic minority in the far west province of Xinjiang an issue that persists In modern times especially due to changing US China relations the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the People s Republic of China often cite ideas of Chinese nationalism when responding to press questions on the topic citation needed Contents 1 Historical development 2 Ideological sources 3 Ethnicity 3 1 Ethnic minorities 3 1 1 Chinese Muslims and Uyghurs 3 1 2 Tibetans 3 1 3 Mongols 3 1 4 Manchus 4 In Taiwan 5 Nationalist symbology 6 Opposition 7 Northern and Southern 8 Populism 9 Modern times 9 1 Internet activism 9 2 Xi Jinping and the Chinese Dream 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksHistorical development editSee also History of China nbsp Qing dynasty illustration of Yue Fei who led Chinese Southern Song army against Jurchens nbsp Portrait of the Hongwu Emperor who led Chinese movement against Mongol Yuan dynastyThe first state of China was confirmed as the Shang dynasty c 1570 BC c 1045 BC The Chinese concept of the world was largely a division between the civilized world and the barbarian world and there was little concept of the belief that Chinese interests were served by a powerful Chinese state Commenter Lucian Pye has argued that the modern nation state is fundamentally different from a traditional empire and argues that dynamics of the current People s Republic of China PRC a concentration of power at a central point of authority share an essential similarity with the Ming and Qing Empires 1 Chinese nationalism as it emerged in the early 20th century was based on the experience of Japanese nationalism especially as viewed and interpreted by Sun Yat sen In 1894 Sun founded the Revive China Society which was the first Chinese nationalist revolutionary society 2 31 Chinese nationalism was rooted in the long historic tradition of China as the center of the world in which all other states were offshoots and owed some sort of deference That sense of superiority underwent a series of terrible shocks in the 19th century including large scale internal revolts and more grievously the systematic gaining and removal of special rights and privileges by foreign nations who proved their military superiority during the First and Second Opium Wars based on modern technology that was lacking in China It was a matter of humiliation one after another the loss of faith in the Qing Dynasty By the 1890s disaffected Chinese intellectuals began to develop a new nationalist commitment to China as a nation state in a world dominated by predatory imperialist nation states 3 Overall their concern was not in preserving a traditional Chinese order but instead the construction of a strong state and society that could stand in a hostile international arena 3 Unlike many nationalist projects in other countries the trend among Chinese intellectuals was to regard tradition as unsuitable for China s survival and instead to view tradition as a source of China s problems 4 China s defeat by Japan in the 1894 1895 First Sino Japanese war was fundamental to the development of the first generation of Chinese nationalists 5 The most dramatic watershed came in 1900 in the wake of the invasion capture and pillaging of the national capital by an eight nation coalition that punished China for the Boxer Rebellion 6 Ethnic nationalism was in any case unacceptable to the ruling Manchu elite they were foreigners who conquered China and maintained their own language and traditions Most citizens had multiple identities of which the locality was more important than the nation as a whole 7 Anyone who wanted to rise in government non military service had to be immersed in Confucian classics and pass a very difficult test If accepted they would be rotated around the country so the bureaucrats did not identify with the locality The depth of two way understanding and trust developed by European political leaders and their followers did not exist 8 Chinese nationalists drew inspiration from Japan s victory in Japan s victory in the Russo Japanese War which they broadly viewed as demonstrating the fallacy of a European centric racial hierarchy 2 30 The Second Sino Japanese war was one of the most important events in the modern construction of Chinese nationalism 9 The Chinese experience in the war helped create an ideology based on the concept of the people as a political body in its own right a modern nation as opposed to a feudal empire 9 Ideological sources editSee also Sinocentrism nbsp This abdication decree announced the fall of the Qing Dynasty and the succession of the Republic of China marking the success of the 1911 Revolution nbsp Yuan Shikai a nationalist in the Beiyang Government nbsp Liang Qichao who greatly contributed to creating the foundation of modern Chinese nationalismThe discussion of modern Chinese nationalism has dominated many political and intellectual debates since the late nineteenth century Political scientist Suisheng Zhao argues that nationalism in China is not monolithic but exists in various forms including political liberal ethnical and state nationalism 10 Over the first half of the twentieth century Chinese nationalism has constituted a crucial part of many political ideologies including the anti Manchuism during the 1911 Revolution the anti imperialist sentiment of the May Fourth Movement in 1919 and the Maoist thoughts that guided the Communist Revolution in 1949 The origin of modern Chinese nationalism can be traced back to the intellectual debate on race and nation in late nineteenth century Shaped by the global discourse of social Darwinism reformers and intellectuals debated how to build a new Chinese national subject based on a proper racial order particularly the Manchu Han relations 11 After the collapse of the Qing regime and the founding of the Republic of China in 1911 concerns of both domestic and international threat made the role of racism decline while anti imperialism became the new dominant ideology of Chinese nationalism over the 1910s While intellectuals and elites advocated their distinctive thoughts on Chinese nationalism political scientist Chalmers Johnson has pointed out that most of these ideas had very little to do with China s majority population the Chinese peasantry He thus proposes to supplement the ideology of the Chinese Communist Party in the discussion of Chinese nationalism which he labels peasant nationalism 12 nbsp Wang JingweiIn the 19th century significant development of the Chinese national identity resulted from an attempt in some revolutionary circles to negatively identify themselves against the Qing dynasty which in their view was non Chinese 13 18 Under this initial view of Chinese nationalism the Chinese identity was primarily associated with the majority Han ethnic group 13 18 After Qing s defeat in the Sino Japanese War of 1895 reformers and intellectuals debated how to strengthen the nation the discussion of which centered on the issue of race Liang Qichao a late Qing reformist who participated in the Hundred Days Reform of 1898 contended that the boundary between Han and Manchu must be erased ping Man Han zhi jie 14 Liang was among the most prominent nationalists who viewed earlier conceptions of a Han focused national identity as too restrictive 13 18 Liang attributed the decline of China to the Qing dynasty ruled by the Manchus who treated the Han as an alien race and imposed a racial hierarchy between the Han and the Manchus while ignoring the threat of imperial powers 15 However Liang s critique of the Qing court and the Manchu Han relations laid the foundation for anti Manchuism an ideology that early Republican and nationalist revolutionaries advocated in their efforts to overthrow the Qing dynasty and found a new Republic in China More broadly Liang s view was that modernity was an age of struggle among nations for the survival of the fittest and that therefore the Qing government should support industrialization and develop a Chinese people with strong work ethic a strong sense of nationalism and a militaristic mentality 16 22 In his writing Revolutionary Army Zou Rong an active Chinese revolutionary at the turn of the twentieth century demanded a revolution education for the Han people who were suffering from the oppression of the Manchu rule 17 He argued that China should be a nation of the orthodox Han Chinese and no alien race shall rule over them According to Zou the Han Chinese as the descendants of the Yellow Emperor must overthrow the Manchu rule to restore their legitimacy and rights Wang Jingwei a Chinese revolutionary who later became an important figure in the Kuomintang also believed that the Manchus were an inferior race Wang contended that a state consisting of a single race would be superior to those multiracial ones Most of the Republican revolutionaries agreed that preserving the race was vital to the survival of the nation Since the Han had asserted its dominant role in Chinese nationalism the Manchus had to be either absorbed or eradicated 18 Historian Prasenjit Duara summarized this by stating that the Republican revolutionaries primarily drew on the international discourse of racist evolutionism to envision a racially purified China 18 nbsp Dr Sun Yat sen founder of the KuomintangAfter the 1911 Revolution Sun Yat sen established the Republic of China the national flag of which contained five colors with each symbolizing a major racial ethnicity of China This marked a shift from the earlier discourse of radical racism and assimilation of the non Han groups to the political autonomy of the five races 19 The rhetorical move as China historian Joseph Esherick points out was based on the practical concerns of both imperial threats from the international environment and conflicts on the Chinese frontiers 20 While both Japan and Russia were encroaching China the newly born republic also faced ethnic movements in Mongolia and Tibet which claimed themselves to be part of the Qing Empire rather than the Republic of China Pressured by both domestic and international problems the fragile Republican regime decided to maintain the borders of the Qing Empire to keep its territories intact 20 With the increasing threat from the imperialist powers in the 1910s anti imperialist sentiments started to grow and spread in China An ideal of a morally just universe anti imperialism made racism appear shameful and thus took over its dominant role in the conceptualization of Chinese nationalism 21 Yet racism never perished Instead it was embedded by other social realms including the discourse of eugenics and racial hygiene 22 The Blue Shirts Society a fascist paramilitary organization within the Kuomintang that modelled itself after Mussolini s blackshirts of the National Fascist Party was anti foreign and anti communist and it stated that its agenda was to expel foreign Japanese and Western imperialists from China crush Communism and eliminate feudalism 23 In addition to being anticommunist some KMT members like Chiang Kai shek s right hand man Dai Li were anti American and wanted to expel American influence 24 In addition the close Sino German relations at the time promoted close ties between the Nationalist Government and Nazi Germany The New Life Movement was a government led civic movement in 1930s China initiated by Chiang Kai shek to promote cultural reform and Neo Confucian social morality and to ultimately unite China under a centralized ideology following the emergence of ideological challenges to the status quo The Movement attempted to counter threats of Western and Japanese imperialism through a resurrection of traditional Chinese morality which it held to be superior to modern Western values As such the Movement was based upon Confucianism mixed with Christianity nationalism and authoritarianism that have some similarities to fascism 25 It rejected individualism and liberalism while also opposing socialism and communism Some historians regard this movement as imitating Nazism and being a neo nationalistic movement used to elevate Chiang s control of everyday lives Frederic Wakeman suggested that the New Life Movement was Confucian fascism 26 In response to the Cultural Revolution Chiang Kai shek promoted a Chinese Cultural Renaissance movement which followed in the steps of the New Life Movement promoting Confucian values 27 In addition to anti Manchurism and anti imperialism political scientist Chalmers Johnson has argued that the rise of power of the CCP through its alliance with the peasantry should also be understood as a species of nationalism 28 Johnson observes that social mobilization a force that unites people to form a political community together is the primary tool for conceptualizing nationalism 29 In the context of social mobilization Chinese nationalism only fully emerged during the Second Sino Japanese War 1937 1945 when the CCP mobilized the peasantry to fight against the Japanese invaders Johnson contends that early nationalism of the Kuomintang was quite similar to the late nineteenth century nationalism in Europe as both referred to the search for their national identities and positions in the modern world by the intelligentsia 30 He argues that nationalism constructed by the intellectuals is not identical to nationalism based on mass mobilization as the nationalist movements led by the Kuomintang as well as the May Fourth Movement in 1919 were not mass movements because their participants were only a small proportion of the society where the peasants were simply absent When the Second Sino Japanese War broke out in 1937 the CCP began to mobilize the Chinese peasantry through mass propaganda of national salvation Chinese 救國 pinyin Jiuguo Johnson observed that the primary shift of the CCP s post 1937 propaganda was its focus on the discourse of national salvation and the temporary retreat of its Communist agenda on class struggle and land redistribution 31 The wartime alliance of the Chinese peasantry and the CCP manifests how the nationalist ideology of the CCP or the peasant nationalism reinforced the desire of the Chinese to save and build a strong nation 32 Irredentism and expansionism have also played a role in Chinese nationalism declaring that China should regain its lost territories and form a Greater China 33 34 To this day the Republic of China maintains its territorial claims since its inception in 1912 Its territorial claims were inherited from the Great Qing government as part of the Imperial Edict of the Abdication of the Qing Emperor Ethnicity editSee also List of ethnic groups in China Racism in China Han chauvinism and Hua Yi distinction nbsp Chinese nationalist leaders Chiang Kai shek left and Dr Sun Yat sen right nbsp The Great Wall a national symbol of China nbsp A drawing of Hong Xiuquan leader of Taiping Rebellion against Qing dynastyDefining the relationship between ethnicity and the Chinese identity has been a very complex issue throughout Chinese history In the 17th century with the help of Ming Chinese rebels the Manchus conquered China proper and set up the Qing dynasty Over the next centuries they would incorporate groups such as the Tibetans the Mongols and the Uyghurs into territories which they controlled The Manchus were faced with the issue of maintaining loyalty among the people they ruled while at the same time maintaining a distinctive identity The main method by which they accomplished control of the Chinese heartland was by portraying themselves as enlightened Confucian sages part of whose goal was to preserve and advance Chinese civilization Over the course of centuries the Manchus were gradually assimilated into the Chinese culture and eventually many Manchus identified themselves as a people of China citation needed The Chinese nation has also been referred to as descendants of Yandi and Huangdi who were legendary historical ancestors of the Huaxia people who were ancestral to the Han Chinese 35 36 The complexity of the relationship between ethnicity and the Chinese identity is best exemplified during the Taiping Rebellion in which the rebels fought fiercely against the Manchus on the ground that they were barbarian foreigners while at the same time others fought just as fiercely on behalf of the Manchus on the grounds that they were the preservers of traditional Chinese values nbsp Soldiers of the Yihetuan The Yihetuan also known as the Boxers were a Chinese nationalist and pro Qing monarchist secret society who initiated the Boxer Rebellion from 1899 to 1901 Their motivations were Anti Christianism and resistance to Westernisation The Boxers at their peak were supported by some elements of the Imperial Army Their slogan was Support the Qing destroy foreigners 37 In 1909 the Law of Nationality of Great Qing Chinese 大清國際條例 pinyin Da qing guoji tiaoli was published by the Manchu government which defined Chinese with the following rules 1 born in China while his her father is a Chinese 2 born after his her father s death while his her father is a Chinese at his death 3 his her mother is a Chinese while his her father s nationality is unclear or stateless 38 In 1919 the May Fourth Movement grew out of student protests to the Treaty of Versailles especially its terms allowing Japan to keep territories surrendered by Germany after the Siege of Tsingtao and spurned upsurges of Chinese nationalism amongst the protests citation needed The official Chinese nationalistic view in the 1920s and 1930s was heavily influenced by modernism and social Darwinism and included advocacy of the cultural assimilation of ethnic groups in the western and central provinces into the culturally advanced Han state to become in name as well as in fact members of the Chinese nation Furthermore it was also influenced by the fate of multi ethnic states such as Austria Hungary and the Ottoman Empire It also became a very powerful force during the Japanese occupation of Coastal China during the 1930s and 1940s and the atrocities committed then citation needed With the 1911 Revolution and the appearance of modern nationalist theories Zhonghua minzu in the early Republic of China referred to the Five Races Under One Union concept This principle held that the five major ethnicities in China the Han Chinese Manchus Mongols Hui and Tibetans all belonged to a single Chinese identity 13 19 The government promoted Chinese nationalism for these five ethnic groups but with the Han Chinese are main ethnic group of Zhonghua minzu or China this continued by Nationalist rule under Chiang Kai shek and his Kuomintang in all China until the proclamation of the People s Republic of China in Chinese Mainland and the Republic of China retreated to Taiwan While initially rejected by Mao Zedong and his Chinese Communist Party it later became accepted the concept of Chinese created in Mao s period was huge Chinese family or a political union including the Han Chinese and 55 other ethnic groups 39 Following the establishment of the People s Republic of China the government extended the number of ethnicities comprising the Chinese nation to these 56 13 19 Before Xi Jinping took power Chinese nationalism of the People s Republic of China was influenced strongly by the Soviet Korenizatsiya policy The Chinese Communist Party also criticized that the Kuomintang led Republic of China for supporting Han chauvinism The official ideology of the People s Republic of China asserts that China is a multi ethnic state with the majority Han one of many ethnic groups of China each of whose culture and language should be respected akin to Soviet patriotism 40 The government also instituted policies of affirmative action in general the ethnic policy of the People s Republic of China at the time was strongly influenced by the nature of its Marxist Leninist state Despite this official view assimilationist attitudes remain deeply entrenched and popular views and actual power relationships create a situation in which Chinese nationalism has in practice meant Han dominance of minority areas and peoples and assimilation of those groups citation needed Since Xi Jinping took power assimilation has been overt and intensified while preferential policies for ethnic minorities have shrunk 41 During the 1960s and 1970s Chinese nationalism within mainland China became mixed with the rhetoric of Marxism and nationalistic rhetoric become in large part subsumed into internationalist rhetoric On the other hand Chinese nationalism in Taiwan was primarily about preserving the ideals and lineage of Sun Yat sen the party he founded the Kuomintang KMT and anti Communism While the definition of Chinese nationalism differed in the Republic of China ROC and PRC both were adamant in claiming Chinese territories such as Senkaku Diaoyutai Islands citation needed In the 1990s the dissolution of the Soviet Union rising economic standards and the lack of any other legitimizing ideology has led to what most observers see as a resurgence of nationalism within mainland China 42 Ethnic minorities edit nbsp The 56 official ethnicities of the People s Republic of ChinaChinese Muslims and Uyghurs edit nbsp Hu Songshan a Chinese Muslim Imam who was a Chinese nationalist Chinese Muslims have played an important role in Chinese nationalism Chinese Muslims known as Hui people are a mixture of the descendants of foreign Muslims like Arabs and Persians mixed with Han Chinese who converted to Islam Chinese Muslims are sinophones speaking Chinese and practicing Confucianism citation needed Hu Songshan a Muslim Imam from Ningxia was a Chinese nationalist and preached Chinese nationalism and unity of all Chinese people and also against foreign imperialism and other threats to China s sovereignty 43 He even ordered the Chinese Flag to be saluted during prayer and that all Imams in Ningxia preach Chinese nationalism Hu Songshan led the Ikhwan the Chinese Muslim Brotherhood which became a Chinese nationalist patriotic organization stressing education and independence of the individual 43 44 45 Hu Songhan also wrote a prayer in Arabic and Chinese praying for Allah to support the Chinese Kuomintang government and defeat Japan 46 Hu Songshan also cited a Hadith 聖訓 a saying of the prophet Muhammad which says Loving the Motherland is equivalent to loving the Faith 愛護祖國是屬於信仰的一部份 Hu Songshan harshly criticized those who were non patriotic and those who taught anti nationalist thinking saying that they were fake Muslims citation needed Ma Qixi was a Muslim reformer leader of the Xidaotang and he taught that Islam could only be understood by using Chinese culture such as Confucianism He read classic Chinese texts and even took his cue from Laozi when he decided to go on Hajj to Mecca citation needed Ma Fuxiang a Chinese Muslim general and Kuomintang member was another Chinese nationalist Ma Fuxiang preached unity of all Chinese people and even non Han Chinese people such as Tibetans and Mongols to stay in China He proclaimed that Mongolia and Tibet were part of the Republic of China and not independent countries 47 Ma Fuxiang was loyal to the Chinese government and crushed Muslim rebels when ordered to Ma Fuxiang believed that modern education would help Hui Chinese build a better society and help China resist foreign imperialism and help build the nation He was praised for his guojia yizhi national consciousness by non Muslims Ma Fuxiang also published many books and wrote on Confucianism and Islam having studied both the Quran and the Spring and Autumn Annals citation needed Ma Fuxiang had served under the Chinese Muslim general Dong Fuxiang and fought against the foreigners during the Boxer Rebellion 48 49 The Muslim unit he served in was noted for being anti foreign being involved in shooting a Westerner and a Japanese to death before the Boxer Rebellion broke out 50 It was reported that the Muslim troops were going to wipe out the foreigners to return a golden age for China and the Muslims repeatedly attacked foreign churches railways and legations before hostilities even started 51 The Muslim troops were armed with modern repeater rifles and artillery and reportedly enthusiastic about going on the offensive and killing foreigners Ma Fuxiang led an ambush against the foreigners at Langfang and inflicted many casualties using a train to escape Dong Fuxiang was a xenophobe and hated foreigners wanting to drive them out of China citation needed Various Muslim organizations in China like the Islamic Association of China and the Chinese Muslim Association were sponsored by the Kuomintang and the Chinese Communist Party citation needed Chinese Muslim imams had synthesized Islam and Confucianism in the Han Kitab They asserted that there was no contradiction between Confucianism and Islam and no contradiction between being a Chinese national and a Muslim Chinese Muslim students returning from study abroad from places such as Al Azhar University in Egypt learned about nationalism and advocated Chinese nationalism at home One Imam Wang Jingzhai who studied at Mecca translated a Hadith or saying of Muhammad Aiguo Aijiao loving the country is equivalent to loving the faith Chinese Muslims believed that their Watan Arabic وطن lit country homeland was the whole of the Republic of China non Muslims included 52 General Bai Chongxi the warlord of Guangxi and a member of the Kuomintang presented himself as the protector of Islam in China and harbored Muslim intellectuals fleeing from the Japanese invasion in Guangxi General Bai preached Chinese nationalism and anti imperialism Chinese Muslims were sent to Saudi Arabia and Egypt to denounce the Japanese Translations from Egyptian writings and the Quran were used to support propaganda in favour of a Jihad against Japan 52 nbsp Ma Bufang a Chinese Muslim generalMa Bufang a Chinese Muslim general who was part of the Kuomintang supported Chinese nationalism and tolerance between the different Chinese ethnic groups The Japanese attempted to approach him however their attempts at gaining his support were unsuccessful Ma Bufang presented himself as a Chinese nationalist who fought against Western imperialism to the people of China in order to deflect criticism by opponents that his government was feudal and oppressed minorities like Tibetans and Buddhist Mongols He presented himself as a Chinese nationalist to his advantage to keep himself in power as noted by the author Erden 53 54 In Xinjiang the Chinese Muslim general Ma Hushan supported Chinese nationalism He was chief of the 36th Division of the National Revolutionary Army He spread anti Soviet and anti Japanese propaganda and instituted a colonial regime over the Uyghurs Uyghur street names and signs were changed to Chinese and the Chinese Muslim troops imported Chinese cooks and baths rather than using Uyghur ones 55 The Chinese Muslims even forced the Uyghur carpet industry at Khotan to change its design to Chinese versions 56 Ma Hushan proclaimed his loyalty to Nanjing denounced Sheng Shicai as a Soviet puppet and fought against him in 1937 55 The Tungans Chinese Muslims Hui people had anti Japanese sentiment 55 General Ma Hushan s brother Ma Zhongying denounced separatism in a speech at Id Kah Mosque and told the Uyghurs to be loyal to the Chinese government at Nanjing 57 58 59 The 36th division had crushed the Turkish Islamic Republic of East Turkestan and the Chinese Muslim general Ma Zhancang beheaded the Uyghur emirs Abdullah Bughra and Nur Ahmad Jan Bughra 60 59 Ma Zhancang abolished the Islamic Sharia law which was set up by the Uyghurs and set up military rule instead retaining the former Chinese officials and keeping them in power 59 The Uyghurs had been promoting Islamism in their separatist government but Ma Hushan eliminated religion from politics Islam was barely mentioned or used in politics or life except as a vague spiritual focus for unified opposition against the Soviet Union 55 The Uyghur warlord Yulbars Khan was pro China and supported the Republic of China 61 The Uyghur politician Masud Sabri served as the governor of Xinjiang Province from 1947 to 1949 62 Tibetans edit nbsp The People s Republic of China took over the capital Lhasa during its annexation by China in 1951Pandatsang Rapga a Tibetan politician founded the Tibet Improvement Party with the goal of modernisation and integration of Tibet into the Republic of China 63 64 The 9th Panchen Lama Thubten Choekyi Nyima was considered extremely pro Chinese according to official Chinese sources 65 66 67 Mongols edit Many of the Chinese troops used to occupy Mongolia in 1919 were Chahar Mongols which has been a major cause for animosity between Khalkhas and Inner Mongols 68 Manchus edit In the late Qing Dynasty revolutionaries incited anti Manchuism to overthrow the Qing dynasty especially Zou Rong 69 In Taiwan editSee also Taiwanese people nbsp Rally organized by the Chinese Unification Promotion Party in Taiwan One common goal of current Chinese government is the unification of mainland China and Taiwan While this was the commonly stated goal of both the People s Republic of China and the Republic of China Taiwan before 1992 both sides differed sharply in the form of unification due to differences in political ideology citation needed In Taiwan there is a general consensus to support the status quo of Taiwan s de facto independence as a separate nation Despite this the relationship between Chinese nationalism and Taiwan remains controversial involving symbolic issues such as the use of the Republic of China as the official name of the government on Taiwan and the use of the word China in the name of government owned corporations There is little support in Taiwan for immediate unification Overt support for formal independence is also muted due to the PRC s insistence on military action should Taiwan make such a formal declaration The argument against unification is partly over culture and whether democratic Taiwanese should see themselves as Chinese or Taiwanese and partly over mistrust of the authoritarian Chinese Communist Party CCP its human rights record and its de democratizing actions in Hong Kong e g 2014 2015 Hong Kong electoral reform which sparked the Umbrella Movement citation needed These misgivings are particularly prevalent among younger generations of Taiwanese who generally consider themselves to have little or no connection to China 70 More radical Chinese nationalist groups in Taiwan include the Patriot Alliance Association founded in 1993 71 72 and the Chinese Unification Promotion Party founded by Taiwanese mafia leader Chang An lo The latter has been accused of violence against Hong Kong opposition figures such as Denise Ho and Lam Wing kee 73 Nationalist symbology edit nbsp A Chinese dragon on the Nine Dragon Wall at the Forbidden City in Beijing The dragon has been a prominent symbol of China for centuries In addition to the national symbols of China the national symbols of the Republic of China and the flags of China there are many symbols opted for use by Chinese nationalists Some of these include Chinese legendary or ancient figures such as the Yellow Emperor 13 19 and the Fire Emperor Yu the Great Qin Shi Huang or more modern figures such as Sun Yat sen Chiang Kai shek or Mao Zedong Another symbol often used is the Chinese dragon as a personification for the Chinese nation nbsp The plum blossom symbol in the Republic of ChinaSimilar to the use of the chrysanthemum which also has cultural significance in China in Japan as the Imperial Seal of Japan the plum blossom is also a national symbol of China designated by the Legislative Yuan in the Republic of China on 21 July 1964 74 It was also proposed to be the national flower of the People s Republic of China 75 The Republic of China patriotic song The Plum Blossom revolves around its symbolism for China In the Republic of China as the National Flower the plum blossom symbolises Three buds and five petals symbolises Three Principles of the People and the five branches of the Government in accordance with the Constitution The plum blossom withstands the cold winter it blossoms more in colder temperatures it symbolises the faithful the resolute and the holy it represents the national spirit of Republic of China nationals The five petals of the flower symbolises Five Races Under One Union it also symbolises Five Cardinal Relationships Wǔlun Five Constants Wǔchang and Five Ethics Wǔjiao according to Confucian philosophy national philosophy of imperial China for two millennia until 1912 when the Qing Dynasty was overthrown and the Republic of China was established The branches 枝橫 shadow 影斜 flexibility 曳疏 and cold resistance 傲霜 of the plum blossom also represent the four kinds of noble virtues originating and penetrating advantageous and firm mentioned in the I Ching Book of Changes 76 Opposition editThere are movements for regional secession from China and independence for Taiwan The Milk Tea Alliance formed by netizens from Hong Kong Taiwan and Thailand began as a reaction against Chinese nationalist commentators online 77 78 Elements of Japanese nationalism are hostile to China In World War II the Empire of Japan conquered large swathes of Chinese territory and many contemporary nationalists in Japan deny the events of the Nanking Massacre 79 Northern and Southern editSee also Northern and southern China American scholar Edward Friedman has argued that there is a northern governmental political bureaucratic Chinese nationalism that is at odds with a southern commercial Chinese nationalism 80 Populism editPopulist nationalism is a comparatively late development in Chinese nationalism of the 1990s It began to take recognizable shape after 1996 as a joint result of the evolving nationalist thinking of the early 1990s and the ongoing debates on modernity postmodernism postcolonialism and their political implications debates that have engaged many Chinese intellectuals since early 1995 81 Modern times edit nbsp Chinese anti Japan protest in Hong Kong in 2012 with protesters waving the flags of the PRC and ROCSee also Sinicization During the Cold War era American strategies to contain the spread of communism fueled nationalist sentiment in China including as a result of the Korean War the Taiwan Strait Crisis the PRC s exclusion from the United Nations and the U S embargo of China 82 The end of the Cold War has seen the revival throughout the world of nationalist sentiments and aspirations nationalism is seen as increasing the legitimacy of Chinese Communist Party rule It has been pursued in a more pragmatic and flexible manner compared to policies during the Cultural Revolution 83 One remarkable phenomenon in the post Cold War upsurge of Chinese nationalism is that Chinese intellectuals became one of the driving forces 84 Many well educated people social scientists humanities scholars writers and other professionals have given voice to and even become articulators for rising nationalistic discourse in the 1990s Some commentators have proposed that positive nationalism could be an important unifying factor for the country as it has been for other countries 85 China has also pursued ethno nationalist policies aimed at appealing to its diaspora abroad 86 nbsp Anti American protests in Nanjing following the U S bombing of the Chinese embassy in Belgrade 1999On 7 May 1999 during Operation Allied Force NATO bombing of Yugoslavia NATO aircraft bombed the Chinese embassy in Belgrade Yugoslavia killing three Chinese citizens The US claimed that the bombing was an accident caused by the use of outdated maps but few Chinese accepted this explanation 87 The incident caused widespread anger and following the attack Chinese officials described the bombing as a barbarian act 88 and a war crime 89 while Chinese students in Europe and America demonstrated against NATO fascism 87 In China thousands were involved in protest marches in Beijing and other provincial capitals some protesters threw gas bombs and rocks at the diplomatic missions of the United States and other NATO countries 90 while in Chengdu the American Consul s residence was firebombed 87 deepening anti Western and anti American sentiment in China China along with Russia had already supported Slobodan Milosevic and the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia during the Kosovo War 91 and opposed NATO bombardment of Yugoslavia 92 nbsp Two Hanfu promoters at the Chinese Cultural Festival in GuangzhouIn the 21st century notable spurs of grassroots Chinese nationalism grew from what the Chinese public saw as the marginalization of their country from Japan and the Western world One such event occurred in the Hainan Island incident of April 1 2001 in which a United States US EP 3 surveillance aircraft collided mid air with a Chinese Shenyang J 8 jet fighter over the South China Sea 93 China sought a formal apology and President Jiang Zemin accepted United States Secretary of State Colin Powell s expression of very sorry as sufficient 93 The incident nonetheless created negative feelings towards the United States by the Chinese public and increased public feelings of Chinese nationalism 93 The Japanese history textbook controversies as well as Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi s visits to the Yasukuni Shrine was the source of considerable anger on Chinese blogs In addition the protests following the 2008 Tibetan unrest of the Olympic torch has gathered strong opposition within the Chinese community inside China and abroad Almost every Tibetan protest on the Olympic torch route was met with a considerable pro China protest Because the 2008 Summer Olympics were a major source of national pride anti Olympics sentiments are often seen as anti Chinese sentiments inside China Moreover the Sichuan earthquake in 2008 sparked a high sense of nationalism from the Chinese at home and abroad The central government s quick response to the disaster was instrumental in galvanizing general support from the population amidst harsh criticism directed towards China s handling of the Lhasa riots only two months previously In 2005 anti Japanese demonstrations were held throughout Asia as a result of events such as the Japanese history textbook controversies In 2012 Chinese people in mainland China Hong Kong and Taiwan held anti Japanese protests due to the escalating Senkaku Islands dispute 94 Nationalism was witnessed at the 2008 Olympic torch relay where pro Olympic protests were held by overseas Chinese in response to disruptions by anti China activists in Paris and London 95 At least 5 000 Chinese Americans including immigrants from mainland China Hong Kong Taiwan and Southeast Asia 96 also protested outside CNN s Hollywood offices after CNN commentator Jack Cafferty described Chinese products as junk and the Chinese as goons and thugs during a segment about China s relationship with America 97 95 When the Olympic torch passed through Paris a pro Tibetan independence protestor attempted to snatch it from a young handicapped Chinese athlete who clung to it 98 The images were widely televised and led to an internet rumor that accused French supermarket company Carrefour 98 of funding Tibetan independence groups 99 Protests and calls for boycott resulted and ultimately subsided in part because of efforts by French officials to apologize for the Paris torch attack 99 Another example of modern nationalism in China is the Hanfu movement which is a Chinese movement in the early 21st century that seeks the revival of Chinese traditional clothing 100 The China United States trade war also fueled nationalist sentiment among both CCP leadership and the general public 101 The external pressure of the trade war allowed Xi Jinping to point to the United States actions as a reason for China s economic slowdown 101 The Chinese public responded 101 Academic Suisheng Zhao summarizes Proud of their accomplishments through hard work tremendous sacrifices dogged determination and well crafted policies many Chinese are fed up with US criticisms that China s rise is because it did not play by rules violated international commitments and tilted the playing field to advantage Chinese firms 101 Credit Suisse has determined through a 2018 survey that young Chinese consumers are turning to local brands as a result of growing nationalism Local brands like Lenovo have also received backlash from some online Chinese for being unpatriotic 102 103 104 105 In 2021 Hannah Bailey a researcher of Chinese internet censorship at the University of Oxford s Internet Institute noted a shift in China s approach toward deriving legitimacy from nationalism compared to the earlier approach based on its economic performance 106 Internet activism edit Further information Little Pink Internet Water Army and 50 Cent Party In the 1990s nationalists among the Chinese public were primarily connected through the internet 107 In 2005 twenty two million Chinese netizens signed an internet petition in opposition to Japan s efforts to join the United Nations Security Council 108 In response to protests during the 2008 Olympic Torch Relay the Chinese blogosphere became filled with nationalistic material many of which highlighted perceived biases and inaccuracies in Western media such as photos of clashes between police and Tibetan independence protestors that took place in Nepal and India but captioned to seem as if the events happened in China 109 110 One such site Anti CNN claimed that news channels such as CNN and BBC pushed false narratives and only reported selectively in the 2008 Tibetan unrest 111 109 Chinese hackers have claimed to have attacked the CNN website numerous times through the use of DDoS attacks 112 Similarly the Yasukuni Shrine website was hacked by Chinese hackers during late 2004 and another time on 24 December 2008 113 During the 2019 2020 Hong Kong protests in response to protestors doxing police officers and people unsupportive of the protests some Chinese nationalists in Hong Kong responded by doxing protestors 114 During the Russo Ukrainian War in particular the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine nationalistic netizens disseminated pro Russian sentiments and posted pro Russian posts across the Chinese internet 115 Xi Jinping and the Chinese Dream edit Main article Chinese DreamAs Xi Jinping solidified his control after 2012 became the General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party the CCP has used the phrase Chinese Dream to describe his overarching plans for China Xi first used the phrase during a high profile visit to the National Museum of China on 29 November 2012 where he and his Standing Committee colleagues were attending a national revival 民族复兴 more commonly translated national rejuvenation to differentiate from national awakening exhibition Since then the phrase has become the signature political slogan of the Xi era 116 In the public media the Chinese Dream and nationalism are interwoven 117 In diplomacy the Chinese dream and nationalism have been closely linked to the Belt and Road Initiative Peter Ferdinand argues that it thus becomes a dream about a future in which China will have recovered its rightful place 118 nbsp China portalReferences edit Pye Lucian W Pye Mary W 1985 Asian power and politics the cultural dimensions of authority Harvard University Press p 184 a b Yang Zhiyi 2023 Poetry History Memory Wang Jingwei and China in Dark Times Ann Arbor The University of Michigan Press ISBN 978 0 472 05650 7 a b Meisner Maurice J 1999 Mao s China and after a history of the People s Republic Maurice J Meisner 3rd ed New York p 12 ISBN 0 02 920870 X OCLC 13270932 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Meisner Maurice J 1999 Mao s China and after a history of the People s Republic Maurice J Meisner 3rd ed New York p 13 ISBN 0 02 920870 X OCLC 13270932 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Zhao Suisheng 2023 The dragon roars 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Times Archived from the original on 28 February 2022 Retrieved 21 March 2022 Xi Jinping and the Chinese dream The Economist 4 May 2013 ISSN 0013 0613 Archived from the original on 10 May 2016 Retrieved 12 September 2019 Hizi Gil 2 January 2019 Speaking the China Dream self realization and nationalism in China s public speaking shows Continuum Camperdown Australia 33 1 37 50 doi 10 1080 10304312 2018 1536967 ISSN 1030 4312 S2CID 150007367 Peter Ferdinand Westward ho the China dream and one belt one road Chinese foreign policy under Xi Jinping International Affairs 92 4 2016 941 957 quoting p 955 doi 10 1111 1468 2346 12660Further reading editBefu Harumi Cultural Nationalism in East Asia Representation and Identity 1993 Berkeley Calif Institute of East Asian Studies University of California Cabestan Jean Pierre The many facets of Chinese nationalism China perspectives 2005 2005 59 online Chang Maria Hsia Return of the Dragon China s Wounded Nationalism Westview Press 2001 256 pp ISBN 0 8133 3856 5 Chow Kai Wing Narrating Nation Race and National Culture Imagining the Hanzu Identity in Modern China in Chow Kai Wing Kevin M Doak and Poshek Fu eds Constructing nationhood in modern East Asia 2001 Ann Arbor University of Michigan Press pp 47 84 Gries Peter Hays China s New Nationalism Pride Politics and Diplomacy University of California Press January 2004 hardcover 224 pages ISBN 0 520 23297 6 Duara Prasenjit De constructing the Chinese Nation in Australian Journal of Chinese Affairs July 1993 No 30 pp 1 26 Duara Prasenjit Rescuing History from the Nation Chicago and London University of Chicago Press 1995 Fitzgerald John Awakening China Politics Culture and Class in the Nationalist Revolution 1996 Stanford University Press He Baogang Nationalism national identity and democratization in China Routledge 2018 Hoston Germaine A The State Identity and the National Question in China and Japan 1994 Princeton UP Huang Grace C Chiang Kai shek s Politics of Shame Leadership Legacy and National Identity in China Cambridge Harvard University Asia Center 2021 Hughes Christopher Chinese Nationalism in the Global Era 2006 Judge Joan Talent Virtue and Nation Chinese Nationalism and Female Subjectivities in the Early Twentieth Century American Historical Review 106 3 2001 pp 765 803 online Karl Rebecca E Staging the World Chinese Nationalism at the Turn of the Twentieth Century Duke UP 2002 excerpt Leibold James Reconfiguring Chinese nationalism How the Qing frontier and its indigenes became Chinese Palgrave MacMillan 2007 ISBN missing Lust John The Su pao Case An Episode in the Early Chinese Nationalist Movement Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 27 2 1964 pp 408 429 online Motyl Alexander J 2001 Encyclopedia of Nationalism Volume II Academic Press ISBN 0 12 227230 7 Nyiri Pal and Joana Breidenbach eds China Inside Out Contemporary Chinese Nationalism and Transnationalism 2005 online Archived 19 June 2020 at the Wayback Machine Pye Lucian W How China s nationalism was Shanghaied Australian Journal of Chinese Affairs 29 1993 107 133 Tan Alexander C and Boyu Chen China s Competing and Co opting Nationalisms Implications to Sino Japanese Relations Pacific Focus 2013 28 3 pp 365 383 abstract Tonnesson Stein Will nationalism drive conflict in Asia Nations and Nationalism 22 2 2016 online Unger Jonathan ed Chinese nationalism M E Sharpe 1996 ISBN missing Wang Gungwu The revival of Chinese nationalism IIAS International Institute for Asian Studies 1996 Wei C X George and Xiaoyuan Liu eds Chinese Nationalism in Perspective Historical and Recent Cases 2001 online Zhang Huijie Fan Hong and Fuhua Huang Cultural Imperialism Nationalism and the Modernization of Physical Education and Sport in China 1840 1949 International Journal of the History of Sport 35 1 2018 43 60 Zhao Suisheng A Nation State by Construction Dynamics of Modern Chinese Nationalism Stanford UP 2004 ISBN missing Harvard Asia Pacific Review 2010 Nations and Nationalism Available at Issuu Harvard Asia Pacific Review 11 1 ISSN 1522 1113 Chinese Nationalism and Its Future Prospects Interview with Yingjie Guo 27 June 2012 External links edit nbsp Media related to Chinese nationalism at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chinese nationalism amp oldid 1206376857, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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