Abstract
Abstract
This article adopts the notions of chronotope and scalar intimacy to discuss collective identification, in
particular Hanfu identity among Chinese youth in the context of contemporary Chinese nationalism. Drawing upon
ethnographic interviews and observations of self-identified Hanfu fans in Beijing, China, this paper analyzes how
they, through invoking and shifting back and forth across multiple spatiotemporal scales, discursively enact collective and
intimate identification among individuals, among Hanfu fan groups (on a local scale), and the general Chinese
population (on a larger, national scale). This paper suggests that the great ancient China chronotope (GACC) has played a crucial
role in establishing continuity between the present (or other time-spaces) and the ‘past,’ ultimately legitimizing the inseparable
link between Hanfu groups and collectives and solidifying great China and collective identity ideologies. It also
demonstrates that modern Chinese youth are internalizing the Chinese nationalist ideology in order to establish a sociocultural
relationship of belonging to and sharing with Chinese collectives as a way to empower themselves to cope with uncertainty.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics