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Shina (word)

Shina (支那, pronounced [ɕiꜜna]) is a largely archaic Japanese name for China. The word was originally used neutrally in both the Chinese and Japanese languages, but came to be perceived as derogatory by the Chinese during the course of the Sino-Japanese Wars. As a result, it fell into disuse following World War II and is now viewed as offensive, with the standard Japanese name for China being replaced by Chūgoku (中国).[1][2]

Shina
Chinese name
Chinese支那
Japanese name
Kanji支那
Katakanaシナ
Transcriptions
RomanizationShina

Origins and early usage

The Sanskrit word Cina (चीन IPA: [tɕiːnɐ]), meaning China, was transcribed into various forms including 支那 (Zhīnà), 芝那 (Zhīnà), 脂那 (Zhīnà) and 至那 (Zhìnà). Thus, the term Shina was initially created as a transliteration of Cina, and this term was in turn brought to Japan with the spread of Chinese Buddhism. Some scholars believe that the Sanskrit Cina, like Middle Persian Čīn and Latin Sina, is derived from the Qin state or dynasty (, Old Chinese: *dzin) which ruled China in 221–206 BC, and so Shina is a return of Qin to Chinese in a different form.

The Sanskrit term for China eventually spread into China, where its usage was closely related to Buddhism. A Tang Dynasty (618–907) poem titled Ti Fan Shu (題梵書, literally "topic of a Sanskrit book") by Emperor Xuanzong of Tang uses the term in Chinese Zhīnà (支那) to refer to China, which is an early use of the word in China:[3]

《題梵書》
鶴立蛇形勢未休,
五天文字鬼神愁。
支那弟子無言語,
穿耳胡僧笑點頭。

"Ti Fan Shu (Topic of a Sanskrit book)"
Whether the situation is straight-up or winding is unclear.
Texts from India have the ghosts and gods worried.
The disciples in Zhīnà are speechless.
The monk with pierced ears nodded with a smile.

Early modern usage

 
A 1900 Japan Post 5-sen stamp with "Shina"
 
A Japanese illustration of 1914 depicting the nations as animals – with Russia as a bear smoking a pipe, "支那 China" as a pig consulting a barometer, India an elephant, Britain a carp, Germany a boar, etc.
 
A 1937 Japanese map of "Shina"
 
Asahi Shimbun reporting on the Shanghai incident of 14 August 1937, referring to the Republic of China as "Shina tyranny"
 
The 1939 New Minutiae Pocket Atlas of Northern Shina, Mongolia and Xinjiang

The Latin term for China was Sinae, plural of Sina. When Arai Hakuseki, a Japanese scholar, interrogated the Italian missionary Giovanni Battista Sidotti in 1708, he noticed that "Sinae", the Latin plural word Sidotti used to refer to China, was similar to Shina, the Japanese pronunciation of 支那. Then he began to use this word for China regardless of dynasty. Since the Meiji Era, Shina had been widely used as the translation of the Western term "China". For instance, "Sinology" was translated as "Shinagaku" (支那學).

At first, it was widely accepted that the term "Shina" or "Zhina" had no political connotations in China. Before the Chinese Republican era, the term "Shina" was one of the names proposed as a "generalized, basically neutral Western-influenced equivalent for 'China'". Chinese revolutionaries, such as Sun Yat-sen, Song Jiaoren, and Liang Qichao, used the term extensively, and it was also used in literature as well as by ordinary Chinese. The term "transcended politics, as it were, by avoiding reference to a particular dynasty (the Qing) or having to call China the country of the Qing". With the overthrow of the Qing in 1911, however, most Chinese dropped Shina as foreign and demanded that Japan replace it with the Japanese reading of the Chinese characters used as the name of the new Republic of China Chūka Minkoku (中華民國), with the short form Chūgoku (中國).[4]

Nevertheless, the term continued to be more-or-less neutral. A Buddhist school called Zhīnà Nèixuéyuàn (支那內學院) was established as late as in 1922 in Nanjing. In the meantime, "Shina" was used as commonly in Japanese as "China" in English. Derogatory nuances were expressed by adding extra adjectives, e.g. Japanese: 暴虐なる支那兵, romanizedbōgyaku-naru Shina-hei, lit.'cruel Shina soldiers' or using derogatory terms like chankoro (チャンコロ), originating from a corruption of the Taiwanese Hokkien pronunciation of Chinese: 清國奴; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Chhing-kok-lô͘; lit. 'Qing dynasty's slave', used to refer to any "chinaman" or "chink".[5]

Despite interchangeability of Chinese characters, Japan officially used the term Shina Kyōwakoku (支那共和國) from 1913 to 1930 in Japanese documents, while Zhōnghuá Mínguó (中華民國) was used in Chinese ones. Shina Kyōwakoku was the literal translation of the English "Republic of China" while Chūka Minkoku was the Japanese pronunciation of the official Chinese characters of Zhōnghuá Mínguó. The Republic of China unofficially pressed Japan to adopt the latter but was rejected.

Japan rejected the terms "Chūka Minkoku" and its short form Chūgoku (中國) for four reasons: (1) the term referring to China as "the Middle Kingdom" (a literal translation of "Zhōngguó" / "Chūgoku") or "the center of the world" was deemed arrogant; (2) Western countries used "China"; (3) Shina was the common name in Japan for centuries; (4) Japan already has a Chūgoku region, in the west of its main island Honshu. The name "Chūka Minkoku" was officially adopted by Japan in 1930, but "Shina" was still commonly used by the Japanese throughout the 1930s and 1940s.[1]

Post-war derogatory connotations

The Second Sino-Japanese War fixed the impression of the term "Shina" as offensive among Chinese people. In 1946, the Republic of China demanded that Japan cease using "Shina".

 
A ramen store in Japan selling "Shina soba"

In China, the term Shina has become linked with the Japanese invasion and Japanese war crimes, and has been considered a derogatory and deeply offensive ethnic slur ever since. Although many[like whom?] assume that the term was created (or chosen) by the Japanese for exclusive use as a racist term, since the character (Japanese: shi; Chinese: zhī) means "branch" which could be interpreted to suggest that the Chinese are subservient to the Japanese, the characters were originally chosen simply for their sound values, not their meanings.

In modern Japan, the term Chūka Minkoku (中華民国) refers to the Republic of China, while Chūka Jinmin Kyōwakoku (中華人民共和国) refers to the People's Republic of China; the terms use the same Chinese characters (with Japanese shinjitai simplifications) used officially in both the People's Republic of China and the Republic of China.

Writing Shina in Japanese is considered socially unacceptable and subject to kotobagari, especially the kanji form (if Shina is used, it is now generally written in katakana). Even so, it is still sometimes seen in written forms such as Shina soba (支那そば), an alternative name for ramen, a dish which originates from China. Many Japanese are not fully aware of Chinese feelings towards the term[citation needed], and generally find Shina merely old-fashioned and associated with the early and mid-20th century, rather than derogatory and racist. This difference in conception can lead to misunderstandings. The term is a slur when used toward Ryukyuans by mainland Japanese people.[6]

A few compound words containing Shina have been altered; for example, the term for Sinology was changed from Shinagaku (支那学, "Shina studies") to Chūgokugaku (中国学) or Chūkagaku (中華学, "Chinese studies"), and the name for the Second Sino-Japanese War has changed from terms such as Shina jihen (支那事變, "The China Incident") and Nisshi jihen (日支事變, "The Japan-Shina Incident") to Nitchū sensō (日中戦争, "Japan-China War").

On the other hand, the term Shina/Zhina has survived in a few non-political compound words in both Chinese and Japanese. For example, the South and East China Seas are called Minami Shina Kai (南シナ海) and Higashi Shina Kai (東シナ海) respectively in Japanese (prior to World War II, the names were written as 南支那海 and 東支那海), and one of the Chinese names for Indochina is yìndù zhīnà (印度支那; Indoshina). Shinachiku (支那竹 or simply シナチク), a ramen topping made from dried bamboo, also derives from the term "Shina", but in recent years the word menma (メンマ) has replaced this as a more politically correct name. Some terms that translate to words containing the "Sino-" prefix in English retain Shina within them, albeit written in katakana, for example シナ・チベット語族 (Sino-Tibetan languages) and シナントロプス・ペキネンシス (Sinanthropus pekinensis, also known as Peking Man).

Sinologist, historian professor Joshua A. Fogel mentioned that "Surveying the present scene indicates much less sensitivity on the part of Chinese to the term Shina and growing ignorance of it in Japan". He also criticized Ishihara Shintarō, a right-wing nationalist politician who went out of his way to use the expression "Shinajin" (支那人) and called him a "troublemaker".[1]

"Many terms have been offered as names for countries and ethnic groups that have simply not withstood the pressures of time and circumstance and have, accordingly, changed. Before the mid-1960s, virtually every well-meaning American, black or white and regardless of political affinity, referred to blacks as 'Negroes' with no intention of offense or slight. It was simply the respectful name in use; and it was superior to the openly reviled and offensive term "colored," still in legal use by people in the South (to say nothing of the highly offensive term in colloquial use by this group)... By the late 1960s, few if any liberals were still using 'Negro' but had shifted to 'black,' because that was declared the ethnonym of choice by the group so named."

[1]

Current usage

In Japan

Japanese Canadian historian Bob Tadashi Wakabayashi mentioned that there are two classes of postwar Japanese have continued to use derogatory terms like Shina: poorly educated and/or elderly persons who grew up with the term go on using these from force of habit.[2]

Some right-wing Japanese appeal to etymology in trying to ascribe respectability to the continued use of Shina, since the term Shina has non-pejorative etymological origins. Wakabayashi said: "The term Jap also has non-pejorative etymological origins, since it derives from Zippangu (ジパング) in Marco Polo's Travels... If the Chinese today say they are hurt by the terms Shina or Shinajin, then common courtesy enjoins the Japanese to stop using these terms, whatever the etymology or historical usage might be."[2]

In Hong Kong

During the Japanese occupation of Hong Kong, the Japanese government classified Hong Kong residents as Shinajin (支那人), as the term was used to refer to all who were ethnically Chinese. Hongkongers that were considered useful to the Japanese government, as well as prominent local figures such as bankers and lawyers, were recorded in a census document called the "Hong Kong Shinajin Magnate Survey" (Japanese: 香港在住支那人有力者調查表, romanizedHonkon zaijū Shinajin yūryokusha chōsahyō).[7] In 2016, a Hong Kong reporter was called Shinajin by Japanese nationalist politician Shintaro Ishihara.[8]

In Hong Kong, "Cheena", the Cantonese pronunciation of "Shina", is used in a derogative sense under the backdrop of ongoing tensions between Hong Kong and mainland China, even in official capacity,[9] for example by Hong Kong localist politicians Yau Wai-ching and Sixtus Leung during their controversial oath swearing as elected members of the Hong Kong legislature.[10][11][12][13] Ray Wong, founder of the localist group Hong Kong Indigenous, said that he uses "Cheena" to refer to mainland China because the "[Chinese] Communist Party is my personal enemy".[14]

On 15 September 2012, a Hong Kong online community organized a protest against mainlanders and parallel traders. During the protest, some demonstrators chanted "Cheena people get out [of Hong Kong]!" On 24 September 2013, the Hong Kong political group Hongkongers Priority breached the front entrance of the Chinese People's Liberation Army Forces Hong Kong Building, the first such incident since the handover of Hong Kong.[15] Billy Chiu, the leader of Hongkongers Priority, later announced on social media that Hongkongers Priority had successfully broken into the "Cheena Army Garrison".[16] In October 2015, an HKGolden netizen remade the South Korean song "Gangnam Style", with lyrics calling mainland Chinese "locusts" and "Cheena people", titled "Disgusting Cheena Style" (Chinese: 核突支那Style).[17]

Inside Hong Kong university campuses, mainland Chinese students are often referred to as "Cheena dogs" and "yellow thugs" by local students.[18][19] On 18 September 2019, the 88th anniversary of the Japanese invasion of northeastern China, a celebration poster was put up on the Democracy Wall of the University of Hong Kong, glorifying the Japanese invasion while advocating for democracy in Hong Kong.[18] Hong Kong journalist Audrey Li noted the xenophobic undertone of the widespread right-wing nativism movement, in which the immigrant population and tourists are used as scapegoats for social inequality and institutional failure.[18][20]

In Hong Kong, some people consider 'hate speech' and even discrimination toward mainland Chinese morally justified[21] by a superiority complex influenced by Hong Kong's economic and cultural prominence during the Cold War, and nostalgia toward British rule.[20] Some protesters choose to express their frustrations on ordinary mainlanders instead of the Chinese government. With rising tribalism and nationalism in Hong Kong and China, xenophobia between Hong Kongers and mainlanders is reinforced and reciprocated.[22][23] Some critics of Hong Kong's pro-democracy movement argue that the prevalence of ethnic hatred and xenophobia amongst its supporters is mostly ignored by the media, which often frames the situation as simply a fight between democracy and authoritarianism.[18]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d Joshua A. Fogel, "New Thoughts on an Old Controversy: Shina as a Toponym for China", Sino-Platonic Papers, 229 (August 2012)]
  2. ^ a b c Bob Tadashi Wakabayashi, "The Nanking Atrocity, 1937–38: Complicating the Picture" (2007), Berghahn Books, pp. 395-398
  3. ^ "读诗杂记;唐明皇称呼中国为"支那"的一首诗".
  4. ^ Douglas R. Reynolds. China, 1898–1912: The Xinzheng Revolution and Japan.(Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press 1993 ISBN 0674116607), pp. 215–16 n. 20.
  5. ^ "Japanese Meaning of チャンコロ, chankoro".
  6. ^ "Police officer dispatched from Osaka insults protesters in Okinawa". Japan Times. 19 October 2016. Retrieved 25 November 2019.
  7. ^ 李, 培德. "香港和日本─亞洲城市現代化 的相互影響 1841 至 1947 年" (PDF). 國史研究通訊 (7): 142–146. Retrieved 18 July 2021.
  8. ^ "石原慎太郎不爽香港记者提问:请"支那人"冷静些". from the original on 14 October 2016. Retrieved 13 October 2016.
  9. ^ Huang, Zheping (14 October 2016). "I'm no China cheerleader, but Hong Kong lawmakers' use of a racial slur was offensive and unnecessary". Quartz.
  10. ^ Wu, Alice (16 October 2016). "Vulgar Legco rebels must be suffering from deep self-hatred". South China Morning Post.
  11. ^ Ng, Joyce (25 October 2016). "Hong Kong Legco president makes U-turn on oath-taking by localists". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 5 January 2017.
  12. ^ "Gov't argues in court that Youngspiration duo 'declined' to take their oaths as lawmakers – Hong Kong Free Press HKFP". 3 November 2016.
  13. ^ "港宣誓事件司法覆核開庭 港府律師:未要求釋法". Apple Daily. 3 November 2016. Retrieved 11 October 2020.
  14. ^ 黄台仰网上叫嚣:我在台日日讲「支那」 香港文匯報. 26 October 2016.
  15. ^ "中国驻港军营首遭示威者冲击引网民大哗". BBC News (in Chinese). 28 December 2013. Retrieved 23 July 2021.
  16. ^ . Guancha (in Chinese). 27 December 2013. Archived from the original on 28 December 2013.
  17. ^ . MetroUK (in Cantonese). 25 October 2012. Archived from the original on 30 December 2013.
  18. ^ a b c d Li, Audrey (11 October 2019). "The xenophobic undercurrents of the Hong Kong protests". Ink Stone News.
  19. ^ . Apple Daily. 23 October 2016. Archived from the original on 24 October 2016.
  20. ^ a b Kuo, Frederick (18 June 2019). "The Hong Kong conundrum". Asia Times.
  21. ^ Wong, Wai-Kwok (2015). "Discrimination against the mainland Chinese and Hong Kong's defense of local identity". AChina's New 21st Century Realities: Social Equity in a Time of Change: 23–37.
  22. ^ Hung, Yu Yui (2014). "What melts in the "Melting Pot" of Hong Kong?". Asiatic: IIUM Journal of English Language and Literature. 8 (2): 57–87.
  23. ^ "香港與內地的融合" (PDF). 19 June 2015. Retrieved 22 July 2021. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)

Further reading

  • Joshua A. Fogel, "The Sino-Japanese Controversy over Shina as a Toponym for China," in The Cultural Dimension of Sino-Japanese Relations: Essays on the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, ed. Joshua A. Fogel (Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe, 1995), 66–76.
  • Lydia He Liu. The Clash of Empires: The Invention of China in Modern World Making. (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2004). ISBN 0674013077), esp. pp. 76–79.

shina, word, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, shina, word, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, j. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Shina word news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message Shina 支那 pronounced ɕiꜜna is a largely archaic Japanese name for China The word was originally used neutrally in both the Chinese and Japanese languages but came to be perceived as derogatory by the Chinese during the course of the Sino Japanese Wars As a result it fell into disuse following World War II and is now viewed as offensive with the standard Japanese name for China being replaced by Chugoku 中国 1 2 ShinaChinese nameChinese支那TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinZhinaBopomofoㄓ ㄋㄚˋWade GilesChih1 na4WuRomanizationTsy平 na去HakkaRomanizationZii1 na4Yue CantoneseYale RomanizationJinahJyutpingZi1na5Southern MinHokkien POJChi naJapanese nameKanji支那KatakanaシナTranscriptionsRomanizationShina Contents 1 Origins and early usage 2 Early modern usage 3 Post war derogatory connotations 4 Current usage 4 1 In Japan 4 2 In Hong Kong 5 See also 6 References 7 Further readingOrigins and early usage EditSee also Names of China Names in non Chinese records and Chinas The Sanskrit word Cina च न IPA tɕiːnɐ meaning China was transcribed into various forms including 支那 Zhina 芝那 Zhina 脂那 Zhina and 至那 Zhina Thus the term Shina was initially created as a transliteration of Cina and this term was in turn brought to Japan with the spread of Chinese Buddhism Some scholars believe that the Sanskrit Cina like Middle Persian Cin and Latin Sina is derived from the Qin state or dynasty 秦 Old Chinese dzin which ruled China in 221 206 BC and so Shina is a return of Qin to Chinese in a different form The Sanskrit term for China eventually spread into China where its usage was closely related to Buddhism A Tang Dynasty 618 907 poem titled Ti Fan Shu 題梵書 literally topic of a Sanskrit book by Emperor Xuanzong of Tang uses the term in Chinese Zhina 支那 to refer to China which is an early use of the word in China 3 題梵書 鶴立蛇形勢未休 五天文字鬼神愁 支那弟子無言語 穿耳胡僧笑點頭 Ti Fan Shu Topic of a Sanskrit book Whether the situation is straight up or winding is unclear Texts from India have the ghosts and gods worried The disciples in Zhina are speechless The monk with pierced ears nodded with a smile Early modern usage Edit A 1900 Japan Post 5 sen stamp with Shina A Japanese illustration of 1914 depicting the nations as animals with Russia as a bear smoking a pipe 支那 China as a pig consulting a barometer India an elephant Britain a carp Germany a boar etc A 1937 Japanese map of Shina Asahi Shimbun reporting on the Shanghai incident of 14 August 1937 referring to the Republic of China as Shina tyranny The 1939 New Minutiae Pocket Atlas of Northern Shina Mongolia and Xinjiang The Latin term for China was Sinae plural of Sina When Arai Hakuseki a Japanese scholar interrogated the Italian missionary Giovanni Battista Sidotti in 1708 he noticed that Sinae the Latin plural word Sidotti used to refer to China was similar to Shina the Japanese pronunciation of 支那 Then he began to use this word for China regardless of dynasty Since the Meiji Era Shina had been widely used as the translation of the Western term China For instance Sinology was translated as Shinagaku 支那學 At first it was widely accepted that the term Shina or Zhina had no political connotations in China Before the Chinese Republican era the term Shina was one of the names proposed as a generalized basically neutral Western influenced equivalent for China Chinese revolutionaries such as Sun Yat sen Song Jiaoren and Liang Qichao used the term extensively and it was also used in literature as well as by ordinary Chinese The term transcended politics as it were by avoiding reference to a particular dynasty the Qing or having to call China the country of the Qing With the overthrow of the Qing in 1911 however most Chinese dropped Shina as foreign and demanded that Japan replace it with the Japanese reading of the Chinese characters used as the name of the new Republic of China Chuka Minkoku 中華民國 with the short form Chugoku 中國 4 Nevertheless the term continued to be more or less neutral A Buddhist school called Zhina Neixueyuan 支那內學院 was established as late as in 1922 in Nanjing In the meantime Shina was used as commonly in Japanese as China in English Derogatory nuances were expressed by adding extra adjectives e g Japanese 暴虐なる支那兵 romanized bōgyaku naru Shina hei lit cruel Shina soldiers or using derogatory terms like chankoro チャンコロ originating from a corruption of the Taiwanese Hokkien pronunciation of Chinese 清國奴 Pe h ōe ji Chhing kok lo lit Qing dynasty s slave used to refer to any chinaman or chink 5 Despite interchangeability of Chinese characters Japan officially used the term Shina Kyōwakoku 支那共和國 from 1913 to 1930 in Japanese documents while Zhōnghua Minguo 中華民國 was used in Chinese ones Shina Kyōwakoku was the literal translation of the English Republic of China while Chuka Minkoku was the Japanese pronunciation of the official Chinese characters of Zhōnghua Minguo The Republic of China unofficially pressed Japan to adopt the latter but was rejected Japan rejected the terms Chuka Minkoku and its short form Chugoku 中國 for four reasons 1 the term referring to China as the Middle Kingdom a literal translation of Zhōngguo Chugoku or the center of the world was deemed arrogant 2 Western countries used China 3 Shina was the common name in Japan for centuries 4 Japan already has a Chugoku region in the west of its main island Honshu The name Chuka Minkoku was officially adopted by Japan in 1930 but Shina was still commonly used by the Japanese throughout the 1930s and 1940s 1 Post war derogatory connotations EditThe Second Sino Japanese War fixed the impression of the term Shina as offensive among Chinese people In 1946 the Republic of China demanded that Japan cease using Shina A ramen store in Japan selling Shina soba In China the term Shina has become linked with the Japanese invasion and Japanese war crimes and has been considered a derogatory and deeply offensive ethnic slur ever since Although many like whom assume that the term was created or chosen by the Japanese for exclusive use as a racist term since the character 支 Japanese shi Chinese zhi means branch which could be interpreted to suggest that the Chinese are subservient to the Japanese the characters were originally chosen simply for their sound values not their meanings In modern Japan the term Chuka Minkoku 中華民国 refers to the Republic of China while Chuka Jinmin Kyōwakoku 中華人民共和国 refers to the People s Republic of China the terms use the same Chinese characters with Japanese shinjitai simplifications used officially in both the People s Republic of China and the Republic of China Writing Shina in Japanese is considered socially unacceptable and subject to kotobagari especially the kanji form if Shina is used it is now generally written in katakana Even so it is still sometimes seen in written forms such as Shina soba 支那そば an alternative name for ramen a dish which originates from China Many Japanese are not fully aware of Chinese feelings towards the term citation needed and generally find Shina merely old fashioned and associated with the early and mid 20th century rather than derogatory and racist This difference in conception can lead to misunderstandings The term is a slur when used toward Ryukyuans by mainland Japanese people 6 A few compound words containing Shina have been altered for example the term for Sinology was changed from Shinagaku 支那学 Shina studies to Chugokugaku 中国学 or Chukagaku 中華学 Chinese studies and the name for the Second Sino Japanese War has changed from terms such as Shina jihen 支那事變 The China Incident and Nisshi jihen 日支事變 The Japan Shina Incident to Nitchu sensō 日中戦争 Japan China War On the other hand the term Shina Zhina has survived in a few non political compound words in both Chinese and Japanese For example the South and East China Seas are called Minami Shina Kai 南シナ海 and Higashi Shina Kai 東シナ海 respectively in Japanese prior to World War II the names were written as 南支那海 and 東支那海 and one of the Chinese names for Indochina is yindu zhina 印度支那 Indoshina Shinachiku 支那竹 or simply シナチク a ramen topping made from dried bamboo also derives from the term Shina but in recent years the word menma メンマ has replaced this as a more politically correct name Some terms that translate to words containing the Sino prefix in English retain Shina within them albeit written in katakana for example シナ チベット語族 Sino Tibetan languages and シナントロプス ペキネンシス Sinanthropus pekinensis also known as Peking Man Sinologist historian professor Joshua A Fogel mentioned that Surveying the present scene indicates much less sensitivity on the part of Chinese to the term Shina and growing ignorance of it in Japan He also criticized Ishihara Shintarō a right wing nationalist politician who went out of his way to use the expression Shinajin 支那人 and called him a troublemaker 1 Many terms have been offered as names for countries and ethnic groups that have simply not withstood the pressures of time and circumstance and have accordingly changed Before the mid 1960s virtually every well meaning American black or white and regardless of political affinity referred to blacks as Negroes with no intention of offense or slight It was simply the respectful name in use and it was superior to the openly reviled and offensive term colored still in legal use by people in the South to say nothing of the highly offensive term in colloquial use by this group By the late 1960s few if any liberals were still using Negro but had shifted to black because that was declared the ethnonym of choice by the group so named 1 Current usage EditIn Japan Edit Japanese Canadian historian Bob Tadashi Wakabayashi mentioned that there are two classes of postwar Japanese have continued to use derogatory terms like Shina poorly educated and or elderly persons who grew up with the term go on using these from force of habit 2 Some right wing Japanese appeal to etymology in trying to ascribe respectability to the continued use of Shina since the term Shina has non pejorative etymological origins Wakabayashi said The term Jap also has non pejorative etymological origins since it derives from Zippangu ジパング in Marco Polo s Travels If the Chinese today say they are hurt by the terms Shina or Shinajin then common courtesy enjoins the Japanese to stop using these terms whatever the etymology or historical usage might be 2 In Hong Kong Edit During the Japanese occupation of Hong Kong the Japanese government classified Hong Kong residents as Shinajin 支那人 as the term was used to refer to all who were ethnically Chinese Hongkongers that were considered useful to the Japanese government as well as prominent local figures such as bankers and lawyers were recorded in a census document called the Hong Kong Shinajin Magnate Survey Japanese 香港在住支那人有力者調查表 romanized Honkon zaiju Shinajin yuryokusha chōsahyō 7 In 2016 a Hong Kong reporter was called Shinajin by Japanese nationalist politician Shintaro Ishihara 8 In Hong Kong Cheena the Cantonese pronunciation of Shina is used in a derogative sense under the backdrop of ongoing tensions between Hong Kong and mainland China even in official capacity 9 for example by Hong Kong localist politicians Yau Wai ching and Sixtus Leung during their controversial oath swearing as elected members of the Hong Kong legislature 10 11 12 13 Ray Wong founder of the localist group Hong Kong Indigenous said that he uses Cheena to refer to mainland China because the Chinese Communist Party is my personal enemy 14 On 15 September 2012 a Hong Kong online community organized a protest against mainlanders and parallel traders During the protest some demonstrators chanted Cheena people get out of Hong Kong On 24 September 2013 the Hong Kong political group Hongkongers Priority breached the front entrance of the Chinese People s Liberation Army Forces Hong Kong Building the first such incident since the handover of Hong Kong 15 Billy Chiu the leader of Hongkongers Priority later announced on social media that Hongkongers Priority had successfully broken into the Cheena Army Garrison 16 In October 2015 an HKGolden netizen remade the South Korean song Gangnam Style with lyrics calling mainland Chinese locusts and Cheena people titled Disgusting Cheena Style Chinese 核突支那Style 17 Inside Hong Kong university campuses mainland Chinese students are often referred to as Cheena dogs and yellow thugs by local students 18 19 On 18 September 2019 the 88th anniversary of the Japanese invasion of northeastern China a celebration poster was put up on the Democracy Wall of the University of Hong Kong glorifying the Japanese invasion while advocating for democracy in Hong Kong 18 Hong Kong journalist Audrey Li noted the xenophobic undertone of the widespread right wing nativism movement in which the immigrant population and tourists are used as scapegoats for social inequality and institutional failure 18 20 In Hong Kong some people consider hate speech and even discrimination toward mainland Chinese morally justified 21 by a superiority complex influenced by Hong Kong s economic and cultural prominence during the Cold War and nostalgia toward British rule 20 Some protesters choose to express their frustrations on ordinary mainlanders instead of the Chinese government With rising tribalism and nationalism in Hong Kong and China xenophobia between Hong Kongers and mainlanders is reinforced and reciprocated 22 23 Some critics of Hong Kong s pro democracy movement argue that the prevalence of ethnic hatred and xenophobia amongst its supporters is mostly ignored by the media which often frames the situation as simply a fight between democracy and authoritarianism 18 See also EditNames of China Chinaman Chink Chinky Locust Wokou Xiao Riben Ethnic issues in JapanReferences Edit a b c d Joshua A Fogel New Thoughts on an Old Controversy Shina as a Toponym for China Sino Platonic Papers 229 August 2012 a b c Bob Tadashi Wakabayashi The Nanking Atrocity 1937 38 Complicating the Picture 2007 Berghahn Books pp 395 398 读诗杂记 唐明皇称呼中国为 支那 的一首诗 Douglas R Reynolds China 1898 1912 The Xinzheng Revolution and Japan Cambridge Mass Harvard University Press 1993 ISBN 0674116607 pp 215 16 n 20 Japanese Meaning of チャンコロ chankoro Police officer dispatched from Osaka insults protesters in Okinawa Japan Times 19 October 2016 Retrieved 25 November 2019 李 培德 香港和日本 亞洲城市現代化 的相互影響 1841 至 1947 年 PDF 國史研究通訊 7 142 146 Retrieved 18 July 2021 石原慎太郎不爽香港记者提问 请 支那人 冷静些 Archived from the original on 14 October 2016 Retrieved 13 October 2016 Huang Zheping 14 October 2016 I m no China cheerleader but Hong Kong lawmakers use of a racial slur was offensive and unnecessary Quartz Wu Alice 16 October 2016 Vulgar Legco rebels must be suffering from deep self hatred South China Morning Post Ng Joyce 25 October 2016 Hong Kong Legco president makes U turn on oath taking by localists South China Morning Post Retrieved 5 January 2017 Gov t argues in court that Youngspiration duo declined to take their oaths as lawmakers Hong Kong Free Press HKFP 3 November 2016 港宣誓事件司法覆核開庭 港府律師 未要求釋法 Apple Daily 3 November 2016 Retrieved 11 October 2020 黄台仰网上叫嚣 我在台日日讲 支那 香港文匯報 26 October 2016 中国驻港军营首遭示威者冲击引网民大哗 BBC News in Chinese 28 December 2013 Retrieved 23 July 2021 个位数港人冲击驻港部队军营 遭到解放军制止驱逐 Guancha in Chinese 27 December 2013 Archived from the original on 28 December 2013 支那STYLE擺明歧視 MetroUK in Cantonese 25 October 2012 Archived from the original on 30 December 2013 a b c d Li Audrey 11 October 2019 The xenophobic undercurrents of the Hong Kong protests Ink Stone News 岭大夜鬼嘈亲内地生投诉反被骂 支那狗 Apple Daily 23 October 2016 Archived from the original on 24 October 2016 a b Kuo Frederick 18 June 2019 The Hong Kong conundrum Asia Times Wong Wai Kwok 2015 Discrimination against the mainland Chinese and Hong Kong s defense of local identity AChina s New 21st Century Realities Social Equity in a Time of Change 23 37 Hung Yu Yui 2014 What melts in the Melting Pot of Hong Kong Asiatic IIUM Journal of English Language and Literature 8 2 57 87 香港與內地的融合 PDF 19 June 2015 Retrieved 22 July 2021 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Further reading EditJoshua A Fogel The Sino Japanese Controversy over Shina as a Toponym for China in The Cultural Dimension of Sino Japanese Relations Essays on the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries ed Joshua A Fogel Armonk NY M E Sharpe 1995 66 76 Lydia He Liu The Clash of Empires The Invention of China in Modern World Making Cambridge MA Harvard University Press 2004 ISBN 0674013077 esp pp 76 79 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Shina word amp oldid 1123364426, 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