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Cyberhype4: Chinese Whisper Markets
Have you not heard of the wanderers of Yueh Hsu Wu Key (Ancient Taoist Mystic)
Beijing has won the 2008 Olympics. This victory is widely viewed as vindication of a
model of economic development that is centred on the strength of an authoritarian
state.
Ccru is watching for what is brewing at the margins since this is where everything
interesting occurs. It is the forces seeping in from the periphery not the dictates of the
Politburo that is ultimately responsible for the development of the mainland. China
calls itself the Middle Kingdom but it still has edges and increasingly the edges are
taking over.
Nowhere is this clearer than in Shenzen, a small town on the Pearl River Delta. In 1979
when it achieved the freedom granted to the Special Economic Zones Shenzen was
nothing but farmland. Twentytwo years later its streets are filled with skyscrapers and
frenzied shoppers, the product of an economy growing at a staggering 34% a year. The
key to this success lies precisely in its distance from the centre. In Shenzen there is a
saying: "the mountains are high and the emperor is far away."
It is no surprise that economic activity flourishes on the margins. State centred
Confucian society was traditionally hostile to traders. As early as the late Chou dynasty
(1100 770 BCE) undesirables were banished to the areas south of the Yangtze River.
Merchants were exiled to the edges of the world, populated by pirates and Taoist
sorcerers. In Chinese hyperstitional lore these edges are known as the lands of Yueh.
This zone on the southern coastal edge of the mainland bred a maritime culture of
commercial dynamism and entrepreneurial risk that was sharply distinct from the
inwardlooking, landlocked, state power of the North. Yueh spawned a hybrid
population with an offshore mentality, inspired less by the rigidity of Confucianism than
by "the underground antiauthoritarian countercultures of Taoist and Zen Buddhist
heterodoxies, that long have flourished on the Chinese periphery." It is this hybrid,
dynamic, peripheral culture rather than the state that is the engine of economic
growth in the Chinese world.
For thousands of years Yueh culture spread outside its borders. Coastal trade brought it
to Siberia, Korea, Japan, Indonesia, through the Indian Ocean, the Malay Peninsula, and
across to the Indian subcontinent. This overseas movement dramatically accelerated
when, in 1276, the Mongols invaded and previously sedentary populations swarmed
down from the North. Forced outward by the influence of the nomads the people of Yueh
dispersed.
Today there are approximately 60 million Chinese living outside the mainland. This
makes the Chinese diaspora the second largest in the world. By far the majority of these
originate from the southern coastal provinces, regions which were once the ancient
Kingdom of Yueh.
This diasporic population has an intense economic vibrancy. This is produced through a
distinct market culture unlike that of the colonists, merchants and multinationals from
Europe, America and even Japan. Chinese business operates in an exterior relation to
state backed capitalism with its lumbering bureaucracies, centralized decision making
processes and national headquarters. It functions instead through a true
transnationalism, planetwide networks of communication and connections (guanxi), and
a proliferation of small and medium sized businesses familiar with insecurity and limber
enough to manoeuvre in unfamiliar environments.
Ccru - Cyberhype 4 Chinese Whisper Markets (Mute 20)
Texts/Cyberhype/Ccru - Cyberhype 4 Chinese Whisper Markets (Mute 20).pdf
Recently this diasporic community has reconnected with its home on the mainland's
southern periphery. This link between a marginal land and its people has introduced
a decentred, outwardlooking mode of development based on foreign investment and
export oriented growth. The fate of China is being transformed not by the authoritarian
control of the central committee, but by this 'opening up, which is being engineered
from the periphery.
Beijing has seven years to prepare to welcome the world inside its borders, but the
outside has already invaded. The exiled wanderers of Yueh have returned.
Bibliography
Booth, Martin. The Dragon Syndicates. Bantam Books: London, New York. 2000.
Gungwu, Wang. The Culture of Chinese Merchants. Working Paper Series, University of
Toronto: Toronto. 1990.
Ip, David, Constance LeverTracy, and Noel Tracy. Chinese Diaspora and Mainland
China: An Emerging Economic Synergy. Macmillan Press. 1996.
Seagrave, Sterling. Lords of the Rim. Putnam's Sons: New York. 1995.
Chaliand, Gerard and JeanPierre Rageau. The Penguin Atlas of Diasporas. Penguin: New
York. 1995