Bending the body for China: the uses of acrobatics in Sino-US diplomacy during the Cold War |
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Authors: | Tracy Ying Zhang |
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Affiliation: | Centre d’ètudes et de recherches internationales, Universtié de Montréal, 3744 Jean-Brillant, #581, Montréal, Canada H2T 1P1 |
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Abstract: | This paper examines how acrobatics was imbued with multiple meanings through the practices of nation-state building and international diplomacy. More specifically, the author discusses why the Chinese government chose acrobatics to facilitate the Sino-US rapprochement and the implications of this cultural diplomacy for the governments as well as the acrobats. Drawing on oral history interviews and archival data, this study demonstrates how the relationship between acrobatics and the ideas of ‘Chinese revolution’ was established, strengthened, disrupted, and finally re-modified to facilitate China’s relations with the West. This historical investigation advances the literature on performing arts and politics by exposing the political logics in the North-South exchange. As important, the analysis of acrobats’ engagement with Cold War politics evades state-centric narratives and contributes to an understanding of international diplomacy from a bottom-up perspective. |
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Keywords: | performing arts and politics cultural diplomacy the Cold War China-US relations acrobatics |
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