Few would question the role that foreign imperialism has played
in shaping modern Chinese nationalism. Yet, this nationalism was
also formed in dialogue with a more familiar, internal Other--the
so-called barbarians of imperial China. By de-centering the
nation-state, "Reconfiguring Chinese Nationalism" explores the role
of the frontier and its indigenes in fashioning the contours,
boundaries, and meaning of modern Chinese identity. Leibold argues
that the rugged and sparsely populated frontier regions of the Qing
empire proved central rather than peripheral to the process of
revolution in modern China. He explores some of the key political
and discursive strategies adopted by the Republican state in
constructing a more inclusive myth of national belonging, providing
important new insights into how China was able to successfully
navigate the transition from empire to nation without following
other Old World empires into a destructive implosion of competing
ethnic sovereignties.
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