Land of Strangers
Title | Land of Strangers PDF eBook |
Author | Eric Schluessel |
Publisher | |
Pages | 304 |
Release | 2020 |
Genre | Asia, Central |
ISBN | 9780231197557 |
Eric Schluessel explores the late nineteenth-century encounter between Chinese power and a Muslim society through the struggles of ordinary people in the oasis of Turpan. He traces the emergence of new struggles around essential questions of identity, recasting the attempted transformation of Xinjiang as a distinctly Chinese form of colonialism.
Land of Strangers
Title | Land of Strangers PDF eBook |
Author | Eric Schluessel |
Publisher | Columbia University Press |
Pages | 207 |
Release | 2020-10-20 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 023155222X |
At the close of the nineteenth century, near the end of the Qing empire, Confucian revivalists from central China gained control of the Muslim-majority region of Xinjiang, or East Turkestan. There they undertook a program to transform Turkic-speaking Muslims into Chinese-speaking Confucians, seeking to bind this population and their homeland to the Chinese cultural and political realm. Instead of assimilation, divisions between communities only deepened, resulting in a profound estrangement that continues to this day. In Land of Strangers, Eric Schluessel explores this encounter between Chinese power and a Muslim society through the struggles of ordinary people in the oasis of Turpan. He follows the stories of families divided by war, women desperate to survive, children unsure where they belong, and many others to reveal the human consequences of a bloody conflict and the more insidious violence of reconstruction. Schluessel traces the emergence of new struggles around essential questions of identity, showing how religious and linguistic differences converged into ethnic labels. Reading across local archives and manuscript accounts in the Chinese and Chaghatay languages, he recasts the attempted transformation of Xinjiang as a distinctly Chinese form of colonialism. At a time when understanding the roots of the modern relationship between Uyghurs and China has taken on new urgency, Land of Strangers illuminates a crucial moment of social and cultural change in this dark period of Xinjiang’s past.
Empire at the Margins
Title | Empire at the Margins PDF eBook |
Author | Pamela Kyle Crossley |
Publisher | Univ of California Press |
Pages | 391 |
Release | 2006-01-19 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 0520230159 |
Focusing on the Ming and Qing eras, this book analyses crucial moments in the formation of cultural, regional and religious identities. It demonstrates how the imperial discourse is many-faceted, rather than a monolithic agent of cultural assimilation.
Eurasian Crossroads
Title | Eurasian Crossroads PDF eBook |
Author | James A. Millward |
Publisher | Columbia University Press |
Pages | 472 |
Release | 2007 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 9780231139243 |
Presents a comprehensive study of the central Asian region of Xinjiang's history and people from antiquity to the present. Discusses Xinjiang's rich environmental, cultural and ethno-political heritage.
Hygienic Modernity
Title | Hygienic Modernity PDF eBook |
Author | Ruth Rogaski |
Publisher | Univ of California Press |
Pages | 419 |
Release | 2004-11-29 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 0520930606 |
Placing meanings of health and disease at the center of modern Chinese consciousness, Ruth Rogaski reveals how hygiene became a crucial element in the formulation of Chinese modernity in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Rogaski focuses on multiple manifestations across time of a single Chinese concept, weisheng—which has been rendered into English as "hygiene," "sanitary," "health," or "public health"—as it emerged in the complex treaty-port environment of Tianjin. Before the late nineteenth century, weisheng was associated with diverse regimens of diet, meditation, and self-medication. Hygienic Modernity reveals how meanings of weisheng, with the arrival of violent imperialism, shifted from Chinese cosmology to encompass such ideas as national sovereignty, laboratory knowledge, the cleanliness of bodies, and the fitness of races: categories in which the Chinese were often deemed lacking by foreign observers and Chinese elites alike.
Timber and Forestry in Qing China
Title | Timber and Forestry in Qing China PDF eBook |
Author | Meng Zhang |
Publisher | University of Washington Press |
Pages | 282 |
Release | 2021-06-30 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 0295748885 |
In the Qing period (1644–1912), China's population tripled, and the flurry of new development generated unprecedented demand for timber. Standard environmental histories have often depicted this as an era of reckless deforestation, akin to the resource misuse that devastated European forests at the same time. This comprehensive new study shows that the reality was more complex: as old-growth forests were cut down, new economic arrangements emerged to develop renewable timber resources. Historian Meng Zhang traces the trade routes that connected population centers of the Lower Yangzi Delta to timber supplies on China's southwestern frontier. She documents innovative property rights systems and economic incentives that convinced landowners to invest years in growing trees. Delving into rare archives to reconstruct business histories, she considers both the formal legal mechanisms and the informal interactions that helped balance economic profit with environmental management. Of driving concern were questions of sustainability: How to maintain a reliable source of timber across decades and centuries? And how to sustain a business network across a thousand miles? This carefully constructed study makes a major contribution to Chinese economic and environmental history and to world-historical discourses on resource management, early modern commercialization, and sustainable development.
The Frontier Complex
Title | The Frontier Complex PDF eBook |
Author | Kyle J. Gardner |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Pages | 303 |
Release | 2021-01-21 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 1108840590 |
Reveals how British imperial border-making in the Himalayas transformed a crossroads into a borderland and geography into politics.