Everything about Sinosphere totally explained
Sinosphere, also known as
Chinese world,
Chinese cultural sphere or
Chinese-character cultural sphere, a term coined by linguist
James Matisoff, is a grouping of
countries and regions that are currently inhabited with a majority
Chinese population or were historically under heavy
Chinese cultural influence. It is commonly used in
areal linguistics to contrast with
Indosphere, which refers to the cultures and languages influenced by proximity to India. James C. Bennett, founder of
The Anglosphere Institute
, sees it as a network commonwealth between
Chinese people around the world.
(External Link
) Bennett envisages the Sinosphere as consisting of
Greater China, and to some extent, its
overseas Chinese population in countries like
Singapore. One of the main unifying links is based on the
Chinese language.
In
East Asian commentator circles, the term Chinese cultural sphere or
Chinese character cultural sphere is used interchangeably for Sinosphere but covering a broader definition. Chinese cultural sphere denotes a grouping of countries, regions, and people with
Chinese cultural legacies. This includes the Sinosphere under the Bennett definition plus countries that have extensive Chinese cultural heritage including
Japan,
Korea (North and South),
Malaysia,
Singapore, and
Vietnam. In French, the term (the Chinese world) is used for this concept.
Modern Origins: 1990s
The concept of Sinosphere, as a network commonwealth, predated the popularization of the modern idea of
Anglosphere (“English language cultural sphere”) in the English-speaking world, and developed largely independent of the Anglosphere. In the early post-Cold War period of the 1990s, economic reforms in the
People's Republic of China, coupled with its recognition as a potent rival government of the Republic of China (Taiwan), increased economic and cultural exchanges between China and overseas Chinese itself, led to emergence of the concept of a network of Chinese people that transcend traditional national borders, political differences, and geographical distances.
Later on, this definition was broadened to include
East Asian countries that had historical heritage influenced by China, countries such as
Japan,
North Korea,
South Korea, and
Vietnam have increased their economic and cultural contacts with the Chinese-speaking communities in both breadth and scope.
Sometimes in East Asia the term Sinosphere is used to imply the concept of East Asian integration.
Defining characteristics
Bennett considers the Sinosphere is unified by first language ability in
Chinese. Asian commentators define the unifying factor as influence of traditional Chinese cultural beliefs, marked by
Confucianist social and moralethics;
Taoist with
Mahayana Buddhist religious beliefs, and the use of
Chinese characters as a major part of writing system (
Hanzi in Chinese,
kanji in Japanese,
hanja in Korean, and
Hán tự in Vietnamese).
Current Developments
The concept of Sinosphere seemed to undergo a setback with the
Asian financial crisis and the advent of the dotcom economies in 1997 and 1998. However, with China's membership in the
WTO and continuing economic development there are some repopularizations of the use of the term
Sinosphere.
The development of the Anglosphere provides an interesting contrast. The idea of a network commonwealth is common to both Sinosphere and Anglosphere, but the two visions were developed independently from each other. As of the first decade of the 21st century, the concept of the Anglosphere remains at large invisible among Asian commentators supportive of the Sinosphere. Among the few who have heard the concept, the common response is either derision or fear. Those who regard the Anglosphere with scorn take the route that regionalist consolidations will triumph over cultural affinities that are separated by geographical distances, and the Sinosphere is more consolidated on a geographical sense than the more dispersed Anglosphere, and also because they regard China's economic might will overtake the Anglosphere in the not too distant future. Detractors who see the Anglosphere as a threat to the Sinosphere regard the Anglosphere as a concept of Anglo-Saxon imperialism and hegemony, and translate the term into Chinese as (literally “Anglo-Saxon Co-Prosperity Sphere”
(External Link
)) in an attempt to evoke the memory over the historical Japanese concept of a
Greater East Asian Co-Prosperity Sphere (Chinese: ) during the
World War II. Some other commentators point out India is an Anglosphere member and it has the potential to overtake China in economic developments. Some also see the Anglosphere's flexible nature and civil society base as points of strengths that the Sinosphere lacks (
James C. Bennett's
Anglosphere Challenge) and which will guarantee it'll pose a serious competition against the Sinosphere.
Currently
Singapore,
Hong Kong, and
Japan are contested by both Anglosphere and Sinosphere proponents as under each respective sphere of influence. Singapore has a 76% Chinese majority, but its governmental, legal and business practice are more akin to English-speaking countries courtesy of its British colonial past. Hong Kong's position is similar to Singapore but its population is 98% Chinese and in Hong Kong, Chinese rather than English is commonly used as the daily communication medium. Japan has had ancient Chinese influence ever since the
Taika Reform period; however, the Anglosphere has displaced China in influence from the time of
Commodore Matthew Perry's visit in 1853. Post-
World War II, Japanese political and military interests are more often aligned with the
United States than with China.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Sinosphere'.
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