Negotiating Ethnicity in China: Citizenship as a Response to the State

封面
Routledge, 2003年8月29日 - 272 頁
This challenging study brings together anthropology and political science to examine how ethnic minorities are constructed by the state, and how they respond to such constructions.
Disclosing endless mini negotiations between those acting in the name of the Chinese state and those carrying the images of ethnic minority, this book provides an image of the framing of ethnicity by modern state building processes. It will be of vital interest to scholars of political science, anthropology and sociology, and is essential reading to those engaged in studying Chinese society.
 

內容

Inside China moments ethnicity as legality and policy
1
Comparison with aboriginal Taiwan
17
Contingent identities
61
After assimilation
99
The adaptation of Islam
129
Educational practices
163
Sluggish enrollment
197
Conclusion
233
Interviewees relevant to Chapter 3
245
Notes
246
Bibliography
257
Index
264
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關於作者 (2003)

Chih-yu Shih, National Chair Professor of 2001-2003 at National Taiwan University, teaches Chines politics, cultural studies and political psychology. He received his MPP from Harvard University and Ph.D from the University of Denver. In addition to 33 Chinese books, his English publications include Collective Democracy, State and Society in China's Political Economy, Symbolic War, China's Just World and The Spirit Chinese Foreign Policy. His ethnicity is Chinese Miao.

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