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Journal ArticleDOI

Rescuing the Empire: Chinese Nation-building in the Twentieth Century

Magnus Fiskesjö
- 01 Jan 2006 - 
- Vol. 5, Iss: 1, pp 15-44
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TLDR
In this paper, the authors take modern China's dilemma of how to deal with the legacy of its imperial past as the starting point for a discussion of the drawn-out re-creation of China in the twentieth century.
Abstract
This paper takes modern China's dilemma of how to deal with the legacy of its imperial past as the starting point for a discussion of the drawn-out re-creation of China in the twentieth century. The particular focus is on the important role of non-Han ethnic minorities in this process. It is pointed out that the non-recognition and forced assimilation of all such minorities, in favour of a unified citizenship on an imagined European, American or Japanese model, was actually considered as a serious alternative and favoured by many Chinese nation-builders in the wake of the overthrow of the last imperial dynasty in 1911. The article then proceeds to a discussion of why, on the contrary, ethnic minorities should instead have been formally identified and in some cases even actively organised as official minorities, recognised and incorporated into the state structure, as happened after 1949. Based on the formal and symbolic qualities of the constitution of these minorities, it is argued that new China is also a new formulation of the imperial Chinese model, which resurrects the corollary idea of civilisation as a transformative force that requires a primitive, backward periphery as its object.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Civilisation and the Anthropological Study of China

TL;DR: The revival of critical approaches to "civilisation" in anthropology has led to a new dynamism in the work of several contemporary anthropologists of China (Dean 1998, Feuchtwang 2006, 2009; Fiskes as mentioned in this paper ).
Journal ArticleDOI

Manikin‐Ship: Value‐added relatedness in Vietnamese museums, 1996–2005

TL;DR: The authors focus on the signification of ethnicity in Vietnamese museums, particularly on an apparent distinction between historically ‘hot’ and ‘cold’ matter, and show that objects are telling of identity and difference through possession, exchange, and display, but this dynamic must be historicised and socially situated.
Book ChapterDOI

Nationhood and Ethnicity at the Frontiers: A Study of Hmong Identity in Western Hunan

TL;DR: In this paper, the characteristics of multipolar nationhood and ethnicity in the local history of western Hunan in late imperial China were examined through analysing the relationship between indigenous communities (mainly the Hmong ethnic group) and the central imperial government.