Wired Tianxia, wounded borders: ressentiment, firewalls, migrant bodies, and aesthetics

Joyce C. H. Liu, Brett Neilson, Manuela Bojadzijev, Lisa Leung, Karin G. Oen

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Abstract

What unfolds when Tianxia— “All-Under-Heaven”—is digitally interwoven into a global Großraum? Can such a wired realm nurture harmony as kin within a planetary household? Unlikely. Ressentiment festers beneath the surface, shaped by geo-historical legacies and geopolitical anxieties. Apparatuses like Germany’s proposed digital Brandmauer or China’s Great Firewall are merely the architectural facades of deeper affective fortifications. These sentiments, displaced onto racialized others, migrants, and outsiders, manifest as localized xenophobia and structural precarity, and echo through contemporary artistic expression. This panel examines these entanglements across Europe and Asia while envisioning ethical and intellectual interventions against the repressive currents of our digital zeitgeist.
Original languageEnglish
Number of pages17
JournalConflict, Justice, Decolonization: Asia in Transition in the 21st Century
Publication statusPublished - 2025

Keywords

  • ressentiment
  • tianxia
  • digital governance
  • migration

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