1. Introduction: The Age of Migration in Afro-Asia – Towards a ‘Multicultural South’?
Scarlett Cornelissen and Yoichi Mine
PART I CONNECTED HISTORIES
2. The Little and the Large: A Little Book and Connected History between Asia and Africa
Shamil Jeppie
3. ‘Many Makassars: Tracing an African-Southeast Asian Narrative of Shayk Yusuf of Makassar
Saarah Jappie
PART II ASIA IN AFRICA
4. Associations as Social Capital of ‘New Chinese Migrants’ in Africa: Empirical Investigations of Ghana, Zimbabwe, Tanzania and South Africa Liu Haifang
5. Liminal Spaces: Ethnic Chinese in the Borderlands of Southern Africa
Yoon Jung Park
6. The Construction of ‘Otherness’: A History of the Chinese Migrants in South Africa
Karen L. Harris
7. Of Shark Meat and Women’s Clothes: African and Indian Everyday Encounters in 20th-Century Dar es Salaam
Ned Bertz
8. Watching East Asia in South Africa: Imagining Cultural Belonging in the Age of Transnational Media
Cobus van Staden
PART III AFRICA IN ASIA
9. African Traders in Yiwu: Expanding Transnational Trade Networks and Navigating China’s Complex Multicultural Environment
Daouda Cissé
10. Window to a South-South World: Ordinary Gentrification and African Migrants in Delhi
Rohit Negi and Persis Taraporevala
11. African Football Players in Cambodia
Toshihiro Abe
12. Travelling for Solidarity: Japanese Activists in the Transnational Anti-Apartheid Movement
Kumiko Makino
13. Conclusion: Everyday Encounters in Afro-Asia Relations
Scarlett Cornelissen and Yoichi Mine
Scarlett Cornelissen is Professor at the Department of Political Science at Stellenbosch University, South Africa. She works in the field of international relations, addressing broader questions of Africa’s place in the contemporary international system and more specific topics related to the political economy of Africa’s relations with East Asia.
Yoichi Mine is Professor at the Graduate School of Global Studies at Doshisha University, Japan. His research focuses on human security and African area studies.
This book – through a collection of case studies covering Southern and East Africa, China, India, Japan, South Korea and Southeast Asia – offers insights into the nature of social exchanges between Africa and Asia. In the age of the ‘Rise of the South’, it documents the entanglements and the lived experiences of African and Asian people on the move. Divided into three parts, the authors look at Asians in Africa, Africans in Asia, and the ‘connected histories’ that the two share, which illuminate emerging and historical modalities of Afro-Asian human encounters. Cornelissen and Yoichi show how migrants activate multiple forms of transnational social capital as part of their survival strategies and develop complex relationships with host communities.