Dependent Nationalism: The People and Territory in the Chinese Inward Defense
Author: Chih-Yu Shih
Abstract / Chinese PDF Download
The National Defense Act passed by the National People’s Congress of March 1997 may well cause controversy due to its incompatibility with norms of Western sovereign states. Indeed Chinese national defense is inward defense to the extent that it aims to prevent a harmonious social being from splitting. From a postcolonial perspective, I believe that the hybrid influences in the Chinese public consciousness have cause enormous anxiety among Chinese leaders. Since the enemy resides within, it is impossible to speak strictly of territorially oriented national defense. Inward defense is nevertheless considered so undemocratic that it defeats the purpose of having sovereignty to protect citizens from external threat. However, inward defense exists in all states albeit indirect in Western states. The nature of inward defense enables the Chinese military to ironically lose or relinquish territory with a feeling of superiority, or display a compulsive attachment to a piece of land regardless of the sacrifices required. All this performance, in the end, enacts a position of moral incorruptibility with a spirit reaching far and beyond secular territory, therefore reproducing a difference that distinguishes the Chinese from the imperialist Other.