Sino-Burmese Secondary Migration and Identity: Tracing Family Histories

IF 0.4 Q4 ETHNIC STUDIES
Tienshi Chen (陈天玺)
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This paper investigates Burmese migrants of Chinese descent, particularly those living in Japan. Many migrants’ fathers or grandfathers originally migrated to Burma/Myanmar due to political turbulence back in China. Studies on overseas Chinese often focus on migration to countries such as Japan, the US, Indonesia, or Burma/Myanmar. Little research has thus far considered families who later embark on a secondary migration to Japan. I traced the family histories of two Sino-Burmese leaders of the Burmese community in Japan. Based on interviews and fieldwork in Japan and Burma/Myanmar between 2016 and 2018, I explored what it means to be a Chinese minority living in Burma/Myanmar. Such people faced a glass ceiling due to ethnic discrimination linked to political instability. Roots in China, nativity in Burma/Myanmar, and migration to Japan and the US tend to create multiple identities. After migrating to Japan, they claimed Burmese identity and used their Japan connections and identity to organize Burmese pro-democracy actions. One ran a sushi restaurant after further migration to the US.
中缅二次移民与身份认同:家族史溯源
本文调查了华裔缅甸移民,特别是那些生活在日本的移民。许多移民的父亲或祖父最初是由于中国的政治动荡而移民到缅甸的。对海外华人的研究通常集中在移民到日本、美国、印度尼西亚或缅甸等国。到目前为止,很少有研究考虑后来二次移民到日本的家庭。我追溯了在日本的缅甸社区的两位中缅领导人的家族历史。基于2016年至2018年间在日本和缅甸的采访和实地调查,我探索了生活在缅甸的中国少数民族意味着什么。由于与政治不稳定有关的种族歧视,这些人面临着玻璃天花板。植根于中国、缅甸本土以及移民到日本和美国往往会产生多重身份。移民到日本后,他们声称自己是缅甸人,并利用他们在日本的关系和身份组织缅甸的民主行动。其中一家在进一步移民到美国后经营着一家寿司店。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Chinese Overseas
Journal of Chinese Overseas ETHNIC STUDIES-
CiteScore
0.90
自引率
33.30%
发文量
25
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