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Margaret Tart, Lao She, and the Opium-Master's Wife: Race and Class among Chinese Commercial Immigrants in London and Australia, 1866–1929

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 January 2013

Sascha Auerbach*
Affiliation:
Department of History, University of Nottingham

Abstract

What little has been written about Chinese immigrants in the British Empire has focused mainly on laborers, commonly known as “coolies,” and their roles in imperial society, culture, and industry. Chinese commercial immigrants, though they loomed large in public dialogues about race, migration, and empire, have been virtually ignored. This article examines how such immigrants were represented, and how two prominent individuals represented themselves, in London and metropolitan Australia, respectively, during a high tide of British imperialism and Chinese global migration. By the 1920s, the ardent pro-British sentiment expressed by Mei Quong Tart, the de facto representative of the Chinese merchant class in Australia, had been superseded by the anti-colonial critique of Lao She, one of China's foremost modern novelists. Lao She's semi-autobiographical depiction of Chinese life in London condemned the violent and emasculating character of British imperialism, while also excoriating Chinese society's failure to modernize, cohere as a nation, and overcome internecine class conflicts. Both authors were concerned with social relations between Chinese men and white British women, as were British commentators throughout this period, and with differentiating themselves from laboring Chinese immigrants. Contrary to Stuart Hall's famous assertion that “race is the modality through which class is lived,” for these Chinese commercial immigrants class and gender proved to be more essential than were crude concepts of race to their experiences and self-identification, and ultimately to British society's rejection of their attempts to assimilate.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Society for the Comparative Study of Society and History 2013

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53 That same year, Parkes publicly gifted Tart an inscribed copy of his poetry anthology, Fragmentary Thoughts. Travers, Australian Mandarin, 91.

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55 The impossibility of full assimilation, and the manner in which the process itself emphasizes racial and cultural differences rather than eliding them, have been emphasized in the work of Zymunt Bauman, Homi K. Bhabha, and most recently, Ien Ang. The latter argued, The traces of Asianness cannot be erased completely from the westernized Asian.” Ien Ang, On Not Speaking Chinese: Living between Asia and the West (London: Routledge, 2001), 9Google Scholar.

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82 Ibid.: 98.

83 Ibid.: 279.

84 In a more contemporary context, similar ideas appear both in Edward Said's analysis of how the British constructed images of the Orient and the Orientalized “other” to confirm their own racial superiority, and across the realms of post-colonial literature and critique, which emphasize the persistent power of British cultural hegemony decades after Britain itself has ceased to be an imperial power. Edward Said, Orientalism (New York: Vintage, 1979), 3; Ashcroft, Griffiths, and Tiffin, Empire Writes Back, 7.

85 Beyer, John, “Review of Jean M. James (tr.), Mr. Ma and Son, a Novel by Lao She,” Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 46 (1983): 182–83CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Much of Lao She's work was suppressed during the Cultural Revolution, and the author was found drowned in a Taiping lake in October 1966. He was posthumously “rehabilitated” by the Communist Party in 1979.

86 Mrinalini Sinha argues for the centrality of a similar dynamic in British-Indian imperial relations, in Colonial Masculinity, 1.

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88 Ibid.: 53.

89 Ibid.: 327.

90 Ibid.: 362–63.

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92 Seshagiri, “Modernity's (Yellow) Perils,” 162. Other examples in which Chinese villains figured prominently included Thomas Burke's bestselling Limehouse Nights (1916), and the play Mr. Wu (1913). Along with Rohmer's Fu Manchu, who would similarly appear on the big screen in a variety of incarnations (all preceded by a film adaptation of The Yellow Claw in 1921), the prominence of Chinese stereotypes in British popular culture owes much to American filmmaker D. W. Griffiths, who adapted Burke's story “The Chink and the Child” into the film sensation Broken Blossoms (1919). For further discussion of Chinese villains in British literature, theater, and film, see Auerbach, Race, Law, and “The Chinese Puzzle, 73–88, 109–18, 143–49.

93 Shompa Lahiri offers some excellent insights into how Indian immigrants interpreted and performed class identity in Performing Identity: Colonial Migrants, Passing and Mimicry between the Wars,” Cultural Geographies 10 (2004): 408–23Google Scholar.

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