Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 256
Trim: 6 x 9¼
978-0-7425-0091-4 • Hardback • December 2000 • $171.00 • (£133.00) - Currently out of stock. Copies will arrive soon.
978-0-7425-0092-1 • Paperback • December 2000 • $54.00 • (£42.00)
Susan D. Blum is associate professsor of anthropology at the University of Notre Dame.
Part 1 Part I: Ethnicity in Context
Chapter 2 Introduction: Against Authenticity: Self, Identity, and Nation-Building
Chapter 3 Fieldwork in Kunming: Cognitive and Linguistic Anthropological Approaches
Chapter 4 Desire for Difference: Cognitive Prototypes of Ethnic Identity
Chapter 5 China's Minorities Through Han Eyes: A Preliminary Sketch
Part 6 Part II: Prototypes of Otherness
Chapter 7 The Fetishized Ethnic Other: The Dai
Chapter 8 Resistant, Disliked Ethnic Others: Wa, Zang, and Hui
Chapter 9 Colorful, Harmless Ethnic Others: Naxi and Yi
Chapter 10 Almost Us: The Bai Next Door
Chapter 11 Conclusion: Typification and Identity in a Complex Nation-State
...frequently both charming and insightful.
— Journal Of The Royal Anthropological Institute
The book's strength lies in its ethnographic material. Western scholars have often paid attention to how Han Chinese talk about ethnic minorities, but until Blum, no one bothered to systematically investigate Han views.
— The China Journal
Blum not only provides a unique study of majority Chinese attitudes towards minority groups, but also explains modern anthropological theories of ethnicity in a wonderfully readable way. This well-done and workmanlike study not only provides an excellent account of ethnic stereotyping in south China; it also would be an ideal case study to use in classes in ethnicity. Recommended for all levels, and for collections in contemporary China, ethnicity and identity, and stereotypes and the social construction of belief systems.
— Choice Reviews
For examining issues of difference, identity, stereotypes, and cognition, the book will prove useful to scholars and students alike.
— Journal of Asian Studies
Portraits of 'Primitives' tells a story with which we are in various ways familiar, but which has never yet been told with such clarity and thoroughness.
— China Quarterly
This is the first thoroughgoing study of Han perspectives about minorities. A very important contribution to our understanding of Chinese society and ethnicity in general.
— Dru Gladney, University of Hawai'i