Negotiating Ethnicities in China and Taiwan
- China Research Monograph
About the Author
Table of Contents
Foreword – vii
Thomas B. Gold
Preface – ix
Introduction – 1
Stevan Harrell
1. Surnames and Han Chinese Identity – 11
Patricia Ebrey
2. On Becoming Chinese – 37
Melissa J. Brown
3. Taiwan and the Impossibility of the Chinese – 75
Hai Ren
4. Home on the Grasslands? Tradition, Modernity, and the Negotiation of Identity by Tibetan Intellectuals in the PRC – 98
Janet L. Upton
5. Who are the Mongols? State, Ethnicity, and the Politics of Representation in the PRC – 125
Almaz Khan
6. Transgressing Ethnic and National Boundaries: Contemporary ""Inner Mongolian"" Identities in China – 160
Wurlig Borchigud
7. Being Hui, Huan-nang, and Utsat Simultaneously: Contextualizing History and Identities of the Austronesian-speaking Hainan Muslims – 183
Keng-Fong Pang
8. Hegemony, Agency, and Re-presenting the Past: The Invention of Dongba Culture among the Naxi of Southwest China – 208
Emily Chao
9. Representation and Negotiation of Ge Identities in Southeast Guizhou – 240
Siu-woo Cheung
10. The Nationalities Question and the Prmi Prblem – 274
Stevan Harrell
Character List – 297
Index – 305
Reviews
"This publication's relevance is twofold. On the one hand it touches on the complex issue of Chineseness with all its ideological as well as political and strategic repercussions. On the other hand it documents the state of China related anthropological research, which at present is a particularily fast growing field of Chinese studies."—Barbara Hendrischke, University of Melbourne, Journal of Contemporary Asia
"This is a fascinating collection of ten essays on the subject of ethnic identity construction and negotiation covering a range of different contexts in China and Taiwan....Most of the essays are well written with ethnographic details and theoretical insights tightly interwoven." —Wing Chung Ng, University of Texas at San Antonio, Pacific Affairs
