Visualizing the transnational connections of China’s most African neighbourhood
Peer-reviewed Journal Article
Carling, Jørgen (2017) Visualizing the transnational connections of China’s most African neighbourhood, Environment and Planning a 49(6): 1209–1213.
The vast literature on transnationalism has primarily been concerned
with people, practices, and social fields. Less attention has been
devoted to the enigmatic relationship between transnationalism and
place. A place itself cannot be transnational in the sense of operating
or extending across national boundaries to places elsewhere. But if we
understand place as a ‘meaningful location’ (Agnew, 1987),
it is evident that transnational connections can be central to imbuing
locations with meaning. In short, the transnational is simultaneously
antithetical to place and constitutive of it. So, how can the
transnational qualities of a place be empirically examined? This
Featured Graphic explores the salient yet elusive transnationalism of a
unique neighbourhood in Guangzhou, the third-largest city in China.
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