Contesting the Yellow Dragon: Ethnicity, Religion, and the State in the Sino-Tibetan Borderland, 1379-2009

前表紙
BRILL, 2016/09/12 - 508 ページ
Winner of the 2016 Choice Outstanding Academic Title Award

This book is the first long-term study of the Sino-Tibetan borderland. It traces relationships and mutual influence among Tibetans, Chinese, Hui Muslims, Qiang and others over some 600 years, focusing on the old Chinese garrison city of Songpan and the nearby religious center of Huanglong, or Yellow Dragon. Combining historical research and fieldwork, Xiaofei Kang and Donald Sutton examine the cultural politics of northern Sichuan from early Ming through Communist revolution to the age of global tourism, bringing to light creative local adaptations in culture, ethnicity and religion as successive regimes in Beijing struggle to control and transform this distant frontier.
 

目次もくじ

Introduction
1
Indigenes and the State in Greater Songpan
16
Recovery Overextension and Disaster
69
Ethnic Frontier in a Failing Republic
123
Conch Mountain of the East Yellow Dragon and Chinese and Tibetan Culture
171
Chapter 5 Songpan the State and Social Revolution 195078
223
The Politics of Tourist Development and Environmental Protection
277
Ethnicity for Tourists
311
Local Initiatives and Responses
334
Chapter 9 Ethnoreligion Ethnic Identity and Regional Consciousness at Songpan
375
Conclusion
410
Bibliography
425
Religious Activities in the Songpan Region
457
Tibetan Glossary
468
Index
471
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