Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 320
Trim: 6¼ x 9⅛
978-0-7425-1143-9 • Hardback • April 2002 • $167.00 • (£129.00)
978-0-7425-1144-6 • Paperback • April 2002 • $70.00 • (£54.00) - Currently out of stock. Copies will arrive soon.
978-1-4616-4483-5 • eBook • April 2002 • $66.00 • (£51.00)
Uradyn E. Bulag is associate professor of anthropology at Hunter College and the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. He is the author of Nationalism and Hybridity in Mongolia.
Chapter 1 By Way of Introduction: Minzu Tuanjie and Its Discontents
Part 2 Producing and Reproducing National Unity
Chapter 3 Ritualizing National Unity: Modernity at the Edge of China
Chapter 4 Naturalizing National Unity: Political Romance and the Chinese Nation
Part 5 Tensions of Empire
Chapter 6 From Inequality to Difference: Colonial Contradictions of Class and Ethnicity in "Socialist" China
Chapter 7 Rewriting "Inner Mongolian" History after the Revolution: Ethnicity, Nation, and the Struggle for Recognition
Part 8 Models and Morality
Chapter 9 Models and Morality: The Parable of the "Little Heroic Sisters of the Grassland"
Chapter 10 The Cult of Ulanhu: History, Memory, and the Making of an Ethnic Hero
The Mongols at China's Edge will interest readers interested in nationalism, autonomy, Tibet and Xinjiang (by analogy and contrast), China, twentieth-century history, and issues of representation.
— Pacific Affairs
Most valuable for the broad historical perspective it places on modern problems faced by one of China's most visible national minorities.
— Choice Reviews
An essential read for anyone working on minorities in China, or for that matter in any region.
— Central Eurasian Studies Review
Learned, thoughtful, and beautifully written.
— Booknews
Bulag's passionate, historically-grounded exposition of the complexities of ethnic reconstruction make this book one of the best recent studies of China's ethnic minorities. Through his ethnic lens, he analyses not just Mongols, but the evolution of China's national identity. Anthropologists, historians and many other scholars should incorporate his powerful critique into their teaching and research.
— Peter Perdue, Yale University; China Quarterly
This is an insightful detailed study of ethnic identity and nationalism in China. Combining analyses of a wide range of topics, ranging through poetry, sexuality, children's stories, and historiography, Uradyn Bulag takes the reader on a journey through the evolution of Mongolian identity in China and shows how such identities are woven into the fabric of Chinese national identity.
— The China Journal
The book is a welcome addition to the relatively scarce body of literature that seeks to generate greater understanding of history and culture from the Mongols' point of view.
— Nationalities Papers
[This book] is likely to remain a major source both on the Mongols of China and the tortuous process of their absorption into the Chinese nation and may well become a model for studies of other national minorities of China.
— Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies
Old and thorny questions of ethnicity, nation, nationhood, nationality, national minority, national unity, ethinic or national identity, ways of imagery, national iconography and hagiography as weell as morals of ethnic policy receive in this book a vivid and fresh presentation in the mirror of changing luck of the Mongols of China's Inner Mongolia and Qinghai in the twentieth century.
— Journal Of The Mongolia Society
Bulag offers a textured and sophisticated discussion of the Inner Mongol's efforts to affect their own degree of integration and distinction in the People's Republic of China. This book is a significant contribution not only to the field of Chinese Area Studies, but also to the more general literature of political anthropology and cultural geography.
— Alexander C. Diener, University of Kansas
Old and thorny questions of ethnicity, nation, nationhood, nationality, national minority, national unity, ethnic or national identity, ways of imagery, national iconography and hagiography as well as morals of ethnic policy receive in theis book a vivid and fresh presentation in the mirror of the changing luck of the Mongols of China's Innter Mongolia and Qinghai in the twentieth century.
— Mongolian Studies
This book is highly recommended for all who wish to gain an understanding of the complexities of Mongol identity in modern-day China and the achievements and compromisees of Ulanhu. More generally, the book should be of interest to scholars of Chinese minority nationality policy and indeed all those with an interest in multi-culturalism and nation building in ethnically complex societies.
— Journal of Asian Studies