From the mists of martyrdom: Sibe ancestors and heroes on the altar of Chinese nation-building

This book is the result of nearly three years of fieldwork among the Sibe, an ethnic minority long caught up in processes of Chinese imperial expansion and nation building. Split into two groups since the eighteenth century, 5000 kilometres separate Sibe in their Manchurian homeland from their co-et...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Halle studies in the anthropology of Eurasia
Main Author: Sárközi, Ildikó Gyöngyvér (Author)
Format: Print Book
Language:English
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Published: Berlin Zürich Lit [2018]
In: Halle studies in the anthropology of Eurasia (Volume 36)
Year: 2018
Series/Journal:Halle studies in the anthropology of Eurasia Volume 36
Standardized Subjects / Keyword chains:B Xibe / China / national minority / Identity / Ethnohistory
RelBib Classification:AF Geography of religion
BB Indigenous religions
KBM Asia
Online Access: Table of Contents
Description
Summary:This book is the result of nearly three years of fieldwork among the Sibe, an ethnic minority long caught up in processes of Chinese imperial expansion and nation building. Split into two groups since the eighteenth century, 5000 kilometres separate Sibe in their Manchurian homeland from their co-ethnics in Xinjiang, northwest China. After 200 years, contacts were re-established in the 1950s. In this study, the author focuses on the (re)construction of ethnic awareness by "local" and "official" Sibe historians. Analysing how the cornerstone of Sibe history - the Great Western Resettlement - was turned into a myth, she demonstrates that writing their own history allowed the Sibe to reinterpret their shared past and identity. Combining analysis of primary sources and text-based data with ethnographic observations, this monograph offers a window on previously unknown dimensions of Chinese nation-building and makes an original contribution to historical anthropology.
ISBN:3643908938