People, Place, Race, and Nation in Xinjiang, China: Territories of Identity

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In one of the only works drawing on interviews with both Uyghurs and Han in Xinjiang, China, and postcolonial perspectives on ethnicity, nation, and race, this book explores how forms of banal racism underpin ideas of self and other, assimilation and modernisation, in this restive region.

Significant international attention has condemned the CCP’s use of forced internment in ‘re-education’ camps, as well as its campaign of cultural assimilation. In this wider context, this book focuses upon the ways in which ethnic difference is writ through the banalities of everyday life: who one trusts, what one eats, where one shops, even what time one’s clocks are set to (Xinjiang being perhaps one of the only places where different ethnic groups live by different time-zones).

Alongside chapters focusing upon the coercive ‘re-education’ campaign, and the devastating Ürümchi Riots in 2009, this book also unpacks how discourses of Chinese nationalism romanticise empire and promote racialised ways of thinking about Chineseness, how cultural assimilation (‘Sinicisation’) is being justified through the rhetoric of ‘modernisation’, how Islamic sites and Uyghur culture are being secularised and commodified for tourist consumption. We also explore Uyghur and Han perspectives, including of each other, giving insight into the diversity of opinions within both groups.

Based on many years of living and working in China, and fieldwork and interviews specifically in Xinjiang, this book will be valuable to a variety of readers interested in the region and Uyghur and Han identity, ethnic/national identities in contemporary China, and racisms in non-western contexts. 

 

Author(s): David O’Brien, Melissa Shani Brown
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
Year: 2022

Language: English
Pages: 360
City: Singapore

Acknowledgments
Notes on Names and Terminology
Contents
List of Figures
1 Introduction
People, Place, Race, and Nation … or, the Absence of ‘Race(ism)’ in China
Critiquing ‘Culturalism’ Not ‘Racism’
Territories of Identity in Xinjiang
The ‘Ethics of Critical Empathy’: Or, on Applying Critical Concepts to the Chinese Context
Methodologies
Chapter Overview
References
2 Being and Becoming Chinese: Nation, Ethnicity, Race in Xinjiang
Preamble: The Hotel
Introduction
Defining ‘Racism’: The Hierarchisation of Difference and the Production of Self and Otherness
Limning ‘the People’: Racism as Simultaneous ‘Self-Fashioning’ and ‘Othering’
Conceptualising ‘Ethnicity’ in China: ‘Barbarians’, ‘Shaoshu Minzu’, and the ‘Han’
Historic Sinicisation—Transforming ‘Barbarians’ into to ‘Cultured Subjects’
‘Minor Ethnicities’/‘Ethnic Minorities’
‘Minzu’: ‘Ethnicity’, ‘Nation’, or ‘Race’?
The Han as the ‘Genuine Chinese’
Imperial Imaginaries: Historicising ‘Chineseness’ as Imperial Heritage
Imperialisation: Imperial Imaginaries of Self and Others
Developing into a Unity: Contemporary Sinicisation in Xinjiang
References
3 Killing the Weeds: The Re-education Camps, Carcinogenic Culture, and Techniques of Modernisation
Preamble: The Arrest
Introduction
From ‘Strike Hard’ to ‘Re-education’
Violence in the 1990s
China and the “War on Terror”
Securitising Xinjiang
Carcinogenic Culture: Pathologising the Problem
‘Curing’ Cultural Difference—Ethnicising the ‘Healthy Society’
Torture and Other Techniques of Modernisation
On ‘Being in This Together’: Agency and Complicity
Final Thoughts
References
4 Everyday Others: Ethnic Divides in Xinjiang
Preamble: The Work Dinner
Introduction
The ‘Gravity’ of Racism: The Perniciousness of Pervasive Prejudice
‘Other’ is a Verb: Endotic Othering in Xinjiang
Othering and Self-Fashioning: Han Perceptions of Uyghurs, Uyghur Perceptions of the Han
Final Thoughts: Othering in Xinjiang
References
5 The Ethnicity of Time: Policing Identity Through Practices
Preamble: Dancing in the Peoples Park
Introduction
Enacting Identities: Strategies and Tactics
‘Being Oneself is an Act of Rebellion’—‘Being Uyghur’ as an Intrinsically Political Category
‘The Time is an Act of Expression’: Ethnicising Time
‘You Are What You Eat’: Food as Symbolic Boundary
‘Is Little Sister’s Dress Too Long? Does Little Brother Smoke?’: Sinicisation as Catechisms of National Faith
Final Thoughts: The Problem of Separateness
References
6 Ethnic Difference as a Mortal Threat: The Ürümchi Riots
Preamble: The Ice Hammer
Introduction
‘Living with Fear’—The Threat of the Other
The Ürümchi Riots: July 2009
‘It Began in the Early Light Toy Factory …’
From Student Protest to Ethnic Riot …
Immediate Aftermath
Attributing Responsibility
The Syringe Attacks: A ‘Symptom’ of Ethnic Fear
Political Ramifications: The Removal of Wang Lequan, and the Instatement of Zhang Chunxian
Final Thoughts: Erasing the Other
References
7 The Past as Envisioned for the Future: Sinicisation through Historicisation
Preamble: The White Paper
Introduction
The Right to Re-write History—Reconstructing Identities
Imperial Imaginaries: Imperialising Xinjiang
Historicising Xinjiang
Opening the Western Regions: ‘Beginnings’ as Elision
Indigenising the Han in Xinjiang
Safeguarding the Borderland: Imperialism as a Nationalist Project
Ethnogenesis: Nationalising Descent
Final Thoughts: Modernity as Rejuvenation
References
8 Eating the Other: Assimilation and Commodification of Ethnic Difference
Preamble: Just Call all of Them ‘Guli’
Introduction
‘Colourful Minorities’: Reframing ‘Ethnic Difference’ in Chinese Tourism
‘Eating the Other’
The Kazakh Village: Eating the Other as Exotification
‘You Can Call them all Guli’: Gendering Ethnicity and Desiring Difference
The Dream of Kashgar: Eating the Other as Assimilation
From Sacred Sites to Secular Simulacra
Replicating and Enacting, Not Alleviating, Inequality
Final Thoughts
References
9 Becoming-Modern: Sinicisation, Existential Threats, and Secular Time
Preamble: China Does Not Accept….
Introduction
‘Eating Hanness’: Bringing ‘Civilisation’ to Xinjiang
Alternate Modernities: Or, on Cosmopolitan Uyghurness
‘Speaking the Language of Patriotism’: Mandarin and National(ist) Identity
‘Becoming-Modern’: Sinicisation and Secular Time
Final Thoughts
References
10 Conclusion: Futures of the New Frontier
References
Coda
Bibliography
Index