Mapping Chinese Rangoon is both an intimate exploration of the
Sino-Burmese, people of Chinese descent who identify with and choose to
remain in Burma/Myanmar, and an illumination of twenty-first-century
Burma during its emergence from decades of military-imposed isolation.
This spatial ethnography examines how the Sino-Burmese have lived in
between states, cognizant of the insecurity in their unclear political
status but aware of the social and economic possibilities in this gray
zone between two oppressive regimes.
For the Sino-Burmese in Rangoon, the labels of Chinese and Tayout (the
Burmese equivalent of Chinese) fail to recognize the linguistic and
cultural differences between the separate groups that have settled in
the city--Hokkien, Cantonese, and Hakka--and conflate this diverse
population with the state actions of the People's Republic of China and
the supposed dominance of the overseas Chinese network. In this first
English-language study of the Sino-Burmese, Mapping Chinese Rangoon
examines the concepts of ethnicity, territory, and nation in an area
where ethnicity is inextricably tied to state violence.