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15 - Linguistic Terrain and World Time: Chinese Media Theories and Their World Imaginations

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 February 2021

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Summary

Abstract

Media as an instrument of world (re)making has been the focus of critical discourses on media in China since the 1940s. As Haun Saussy argues, Euro- American colonial and, later on, global discourses since the mid-nineteenth century have often constructed “China” and the “World” as two imaginary poles that are fundamentally different in concepts of historical temporality, geopolitical spatiality, and culturo-linguistic subjectivity. In this light, how media could mediate the relationship between these two imaginary poles becomes a crucial question in many theoretical discussions. In recent years, a key conceptual framework that shapes the debate in Chinese academic studies of media is “yujing” (linguistic terrain): an imagination of the world today as a global economy of gift exchange, which consists of overlapping and, at times, mutually contesting linguistic environments that require remediation. Interestingly, between 1942 and 1945, media theorist Sun Mingjing proposed a temporal model of studying world media by considering international mediation as a gradual process of constructing a sense of world rhythm called shijie shi (world time). In this chapter, I conduct a comparative reading of these two modes of Chinese media theory: one on spatiality and the other on temporality. I argue that these two models are symptomatic of a semicolonial and, later on, postcolonial, desire to rewrite the imaginary gap between “China” and the “World.”

Keywords: Chinese media theory, Sun Mingjing, Media and world order, Sino-Japanese War and Media, Yujing or linguistic terrain

As seen in the previous chapters, contemporary media offers an assemblage of interconnected and interactive sites in which new imaginations and alternative notions of the world are proposed, fabricated, and negotiated. It also re-configures the epistemological space(s) in which the idea of a world could be conceived or understood. Besides the fictional level, media, as technics, directly reconfigures the relationship between human beings and the world. This world, as a set of spatiotemporal coordinates, redefines what it means to be human (Stiegler 1998 [1994], 29-42). According to Heidegger (1996 [1953], 79), for example, human beings distinguish themselves from animals as the former become aware of death and the time it takes for one to die.

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Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
Print publication year: 2017

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