Lexington Books
Pages: 262
Trim: 6¼ x 9½
978-1-4985-0297-9 • Hardback • December 2017 • $136.00 • (£105.00)
978-1-4985-0298-6 • eBook • December 2017 • $129.00 • (£99.00)
Yuqing Yang teaches at Minzu University of China.
Part I: When the Past is Present: Creating a Path to the Ancient Kingdom of Nanzhao
Chapter 1: Recapturing the Past: Configuring a Narrative Identity from Folklore
Chapter 2: Reimagining the Past: Creating New Narratives of Baijie
Chapter 3: Displacing the Past: Baijie’s Modern Transformation
Part II: Leaving “the Country of Women”: A Remote Eden
Chapter 4: From “Representational Violence” to the Construction of a Harmonious Mosuo Land
Chapter 5: Unrequited Love for the Remote Country of Women
Chapter 6: The Controversial Writing Career of a Mosuo Woman
Part III: In Search of Faith: The Indigenization of the Shangri-La and Shambhala Myths
Chapter 7: The Localization of Shangri-La
Chapter 8: Lost on the Way to Shambhala: “Tibet, a Soul Knotted on a Leather Thong”
Chapter 9: Fully-Fledged Shambhala: The Tibet Code
As a whole, Mystifying China’s Southwest Borderlands offers rich insights into how certain minority regions and cultures have been imagined in Chinese literature.
— MCLC Resource Center
Eloquently rendered, this new study deepens insight into minority representation in China by expanding the symbolic analysis of space. Yuqing Yang delves into the ambivalences and contradictions, the passions and nostalgias, that mark China’s fraught encounter with modernity and its imaginary of a space apart where the past is preserved—and potentially oppositional. Fusing Foucault’s notion of heterotopia with the dynamics of otherness, Yang develops a theory of mirroring, however asymmetrical, to illuminate the mythologization of minority places. Through close and politically canny literary interpretation, we journey through the fantasized terrains of Dali, Shangri-La, and Mosuoland where the ethnic other becomes an indispensable outside that is not absolute but is rather complexly entwined with a Chinese self, constituted through difference.
— Louisa Schein, Rutgers University
. . . .the book is less about minority literature (in Chinese) than about the space of and for minority literature in the larger field of cultural representation in contemporary China. And that is what makes the book particularly interesting as Y. Yang successfully negotiates the ambiguities, nuances, and ambivalence of discourses on and by minorities in China.
— Cross Currents