Lexington Books
Pages: 318
Trim: 6 x 9
978-1-4985-0728-8 • Hardback • October 2015 • $129.00 • (£99.00)
978-1-4985-0730-1 • Paperback • July 2017 • $57.99 • (£45.00)
978-1-4985-0729-5 • eBook • October 2015 • $55.00 • (£42.00)
Xiaobing Li is professor and chair of the Department of History and Geography and director of the Western Pacific Institute at the University of Central Oklahoma.
Patrick F. Shan is associate professor of history at Grand Valley State University.
Introduction: Beijing’s Dream and Ethnic Reality, Xiaobing Li and Patrick Fuliang Shan
Part I: Perception, Definition, and Identity
Chapter One: From Five “Imperial Domains” to a “Chinese Nation”: A Perceptual and Political Transformation in Recent History, Xiaoyuan Liu
Chapter Two: Elastic Self-Consciousness and the Reshaping of Manchu Identity, Patrick Fuliang Shan
Chapter Three: Muslim Voices in the Late Qing Debate over the Definitions of Guo and Zu, Yufeng Mao
Party Two: Policy and Marginality
Chapter Four: Uyghur Women in Xinjiang: Political Participation, Employment, and Birth Control, Xiaoxiao Li and Mei Zhou
Chapter Five: Commodifying Naxi and Mo-So Minorities in China’s New Economy, Linda Q. Wang
Chapter Six: The Hui People: Policies, Development, and Problems, Ting Jiang and Xiansheng Tian
Chapter Seven: The Protestant Church Shortage and Religious Market in China: Spatial and Statistical Perspectives, Zhaohui Hong, Lu Cao, and Jiamin Yan
Part Three: Relations, Confrontation, and Solution
Chapter Eight: Still “Familiar” But No Longer “Strangers”: Muslims in China, Jieli Li and Lei Ji
Chapter Nine: Faith and Freedom: Tibetan Buddhist Movements, Xiaobing Li
Chapter Ten: Struggling for a Better Solution: Communist Government and Minorities, Qiang Fang
Chapter Eleven: The Tibet Issue and U.S. Tibet Policy, Guangqiu Xu
Conclusion: New Challenge and Potential Prospects, Xiaobing Li and Patrick Fuliang Shan
Although ethnic politics is not the Achilles heel of the People's Republic of China as it was for the former Soviet Union, it is an important and multifaceted set of issues that necessarily command the attention of China's leaders. Ethnic China presents a dozen well-crafted, thought-provoking, and well-balanced chapters by Chinese American scholars on a broad range of issues relating to ethnicity. They reveal a gap between rosy official depictions of a harmonious, ethnically well-integrated society and a rather grimmer reality in which rapid economic development is not a panacea for all the problems that exist in the multi-ethnic society of contemporary China.
— Steven I. Levine, University of Montana
As the authors grapple with a range of challenging issues, they offer valuable perspectives on some of the most difficult questions facing both China’s Communist Party leaders and Americans responsible for the formulation of human rights policies toward China. The authors, all Chinese scholars working in American colleges and universities, offer unique insights as they grapple with sensitive questions relating to Chinese national identity, political unity, and human rights. These thought-provoking studies of historical and contemporary issues of ethnic identity and politics in China will challenge both Chinese and American readers to question their assumptions about issues ranging from Tibet and Xinjiang to the foundations and efficacy of American human rights policies toward China.
— Harold M. Tanner, University of North Texas