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Tianjin's Worldly Ambitions: From Hyper-Colonial Space to ‘Business Park’

Maurizio Marinelli (Centre for East Asian Studies 4 Priory Road University of Bristol Bristol, BS8 1TY, UK)

Open House International

ISSN: 0168-2601

Article publication date: 1 September 2009

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Abstract

Between 1860 and 1945, the Chinese port city of Tianjin was the site of up to nine foreign-controlled concessions, functioning side by side. Rogaski defined it as a ‘hyper-colony’, a term which reflects Tianjin's socio-political intricacies and the multiple colonial discourses of power and space. This essay focuses on the transformation of the Tianjin cityscape during the last 150 years, and aims at connecting the hyper-colonial socio-spatial forms with the processes of post-colonial identity construction. Tianjin is currently undergoing a massive renovation program: its transmogrifying cityscape unveils multiple layers of ‘globalizing’ spatialities and temporalities, throwing into relief processes of power and capital accumulation, which operate via the urban regeneration's experiment. This study uses an ‘interconnected history’ approach and traces the interweaving ‘worlding’ nodes of today's Tianjin back to the global connections established in the city during the hyper-colonial period. What emerges is Tianjin's simultaneous tendency towards ‘world-class-ness’ and ‘China-class-ness’.

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Citation

Marinelli, M. (2009), "Tianjin's Worldly Ambitions: From Hyper-Colonial Space to ‘Business Park’", Open House International, Vol. 34 No. 3, pp. 26-38. https://doi.org/10.1108/OHI-03-2009-B0004

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Open House International

Copyright © 2009 Open House International

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