The Mongols at China's Edge: History and the Politics of National Unity

封面
Rowman & Littlefield, 2002 - 273 頁
This important study explores the multifaceted Mongol experience in China, past and present. Combining insights from anthropology, history, and postcolonial criticism, Uradyn Bulag avoids romanticizing Mongols either as pacified primitive Other or as gallant resistance fighters. Rather, he portrays them as a people whose communist background and standing in China's northern borderlands has informed their political efforts to harness or confront Chinese nationalistic and political hegemony. Breaking new ground in the study of Chinese and Mongol history and ethnicity, the author offers a fresh interpretation of China viewed from the perspective of its peripheries, and of minority nationalities in relation to the study of Chinese representation and minority self-representation. The author interrogates received wisdom about Chinese and minority nationalism by unraveling the Chinese discourse and practice of 'national unity.' He shows how the discourse was constructed over time through political rituals and sexuality in relation to Mongols and other non-Chinese peoples that hark back to Chinese-Xiongnu confrontations two millennia ago and Manchu conquest in the 17th and 18th centuries. Titular rulers of an autonomous region in which they constitute a minority, Mongols face enormous barriers in building and maintaining a socialist Mongolian nationality and a Mongolian language and culture. Acknowledging these difficulties, Bulag discusses a range of sensitive issues including the imbrication of nation, class, and ethnicity in the context of Mongol-Chinese relations, tensions inherent in writing a postrevolutionary history for a socialist nationality, and the moral dilemma of building a socialist model with Mongol characteristics. Charting the interface between a state-centered multinational Chinese polity and a primordial nationalist multiculturalism that aims to manage minority nationalities as 'cultures,' he explores Mongol ethnopolitical strategies to preserve their heritage.
 

內容

By Way of Introduction Minzu Tuanjie and Its Discontents
1
Ritualizing National Unity Modernity at the Edge of China
29
Naturalizing National Unity Political Romance and the Chinese Nation
63
From Inequality to Difference Colonial Contradictions of Class and Ethnicity in Socialist China
105
Rewriting Inner Mongolian History after the Revolution Ethnicity Nation and the Struggle for Recognition
137
Models and Morality The Parable of the Little Heroic Sisters of the Grassland
183
The Cult of Ulanhu History Memory and the Making of an Ethnic Hero
207
Bibliography
245
Index
263
About the Author
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關於作者 (2002)

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.

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