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Contestation and Adaptation - The Politics of National Identity in China (Paperback)
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Contestation and Adaptation - The Politics of National Identity in China (Paperback)
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Contestation and Adaptation unravels the complexities of
national-identity contestation among various ethnic minority groups
in China. It focuses on the interactions between domestic and
international forces that inform ethnic groups' national-identity
contestation, positing a theoretical framework where international
factors play a significant role in determining why and when ethnic
groups will contest the national identities imposed on them by
central governments as part of the nation-building process.
Simmering grievances and occasional outbursts of social unrest
among ethnic minority populations in China challenge not only the
ruling party's legitimacy and governance, but also contemporary
Chinese national identity and the territorial integrity of the
Chinese state. But, as Enze Han points out, of the fifty-five
ethnic minority groups in China, only the Tibetans and Uyghurs have
forcefully contested the idea of a Chinese national identity. He
argues that whether ethnic groups contest those national identities
depends on whether they perceive a better, achievable alternative.
In particular, Han argues that ethnic groups with extensive
external kinship networks are most likely to perceive a capacity to
achieve better circumstances and are, therefore, more likely to
politically mobilize to contest national identity. In the absence
of such alternatives ethnic groups are more likely to cope with
their situation through emigration, political ambivalence, or
assimilation. Using this theoretical framework, the book compares
the way that five major ethnic minority groups in China negotiate
their national identities with the Chinese nation-state: Uyghurs,
Chinese Koreans, Dai, Mongols, and Tibetans. Overall, Contestation
and Adaptation sheds light on the nation-building processes in
China over the past six decades and the ways that different groups
have resisted or acquiesced in their dealings with the Chinese
state and majority Han Chinese society.
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