000 01738nam a22001457a 4500
999 _c525879
_d525879
008 240422b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aCheng, Yinghong
_951819
245 _aTaiwanese DNA versus Chinese DNA: Genetic science and identity politics across the Taiwan straits
260 _aModern Asian Studies
300 _a57(3). May, 2023: p.940-965
520 _aThe article analyses how population genetics has impacted on nationalist discourses across the Taiwan Straits and affected the relationship between Taiwan and China since the 1990s. In Taiwan this cutting-edge science has helped to construct a native-based and Taiwan-centred national identity through promoting indigenous peoples’ rights, rejecting a blood-based, cross-Straits nationalism, and founding a pan-Pacific indigenous peoples’ community through genetic links and cultural affinity. In China, after subverting the nationalist myth of Peking Man (a Homo erectus group believed to be the common ancestor of the Chinese) by analysing genetic data, the same group of Chinese genetic scientists have constructed another nationalist myth of a genetically homogenous nationhood. Such a discourse not only valorizes Chinese nationalism through claiming a DNA-based Chineseness across ethnic distinctions but also asserts genetic links between China and Taiwan, therefore providing a ‘scientific’ basis for China’s nationalism in the new century. – Reproduced https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/modern-asian-studies/article/taiwanese-dna-versus-chinese-dna-genetic-science-and-identity-politics-across-the-taiwan-straits/331549150E4F11C58A9C96BFD6E56C99
773 _aModern Asian Studies
906 _aINTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
942 _cAR