Affiliation:
1. Lingnan University
2. Panteion University of Social & Political Sciences
Abstract
Abstract
Recent years have seen a surge in Chinese grassroots nationalism. Based on the public discussion on Weibo, the
largest social media platform in China, this study investigated the cybernationalism (re)produced during the People’s Republic of
China’s release of the Regulations on the Administration of Permanent Residence of Foreigners in early 2020.
Deploying a synergy of thematic analysis and the discourse-historical approach (Reisigl and
Wodak 2005, 2016), especially its argumentative perspectives, it examined
the articulation of bottom-up cybernationalism and how this nationalism, boosted by the party-state, turns against the party-state
when it fails to uphold its own nationalistic rhetorics, thereby influencing the government’s immigration policymaking. The
results revealed that the discursive construction of a dichotomy between “derogatory foreigners” and “dignified Chinese” prevents
the implementation of the regulation; the foregrounded anti-Black sentiment reflects a (re)appreciation of the global hierarchy of
race in China based on orientalistic views; the discursive representations of humiliated history vitally motivates
nationalism.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company