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BookDOI

Coming to terms with the nation : ethnic classification in modern China

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TLDR
In this article, a history of the future of post-imperial China is discussed, and the consent of the Categorized 5 is discussed in the context of ethnic identity crisis in post-Imperial China.
Abstract
List of Illustrations List of Tables Foreword Acknowledgments Introduction 1. Identity Crisis in Postimperial China 2. Ethnicity as Language 3. Plausible Communities 4. The Consent of the Categorized 5. Counting to Fifty-Six Conclusion: A History of the Future Appendix A: Ethnotaxonomy of Yunnan, 1951, According to the Yunnan Nationalities Affairs Commission Appendix B: Ethnotaxonomy of Yunnan, 1953, According to the Yunnan Nationalities Affairs Commission Appendix C: Minzu Entries, 1953--1954 Census, by Population Appendix D: Classification Squads, Phases One and Two Appendix E: Population Sizes of Groups Researched during Phase One and Phase Two Notes Character Glossary Bibliography Index

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Dissertation

Standardizing Minzu: A Content Analysis of the Depiction of Shaoshu Minzu in Three Chinese Elementary Curriculum Standards and Textbooks

Yiting Chu
TL;DR: This study analyzes the depictions of shaoshu minzu, or ethnic minority groups in China, in elementary curriculum standards and textbooks that are used in Chinese schools for three subjects—Moral Education and Life/ Society (MEL/S), Chinese Language, and Minzu Solidarity Education (MSE).
Journal ArticleDOI

Crimes Against Nature: Kincest, Cosmology, and Conservation in Southwest China

TL;DR: The post-Mao era (1976-present) has seen a number of great changes in China as mentioned in this paper, including the revival of religion and the emergence of a nascent, but powerful environmental movement.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Ethnic Classification Writ Large The 1954 Yunnan Province Ethnic Classification Project and its Foundations in Republican-Era Taxonomic Thought

TL;DR: The PRC-era Ethnic Classification Project, or minzu shibie, was an inventive process of social engineering, not simply an attempt at neutrally reflecting primordial qualities of the non-Han social sphere.