Book

Minority rules: the Miao and the feminine in China's cultural politics

Duke University PressDurham • Published In 2000 • Pages: xvii, 365

By: Schein, Louisa.

Abstract
This book discusses the manifold ways in which the cultures and identities of China's minority ethnic groups have been constructed and deployed since the 1949 revolution. It does this based on ethnographic and historical data on actual experiences of the Miao people, one of the 56 ethnic minorities officially recognized by the Chinese government as minzu. An important finding of the book includes the multiplicity of agents involved in the construction and deployment of minorities. In the case of the Miao, these forces include not just state agents, but also none-state actors (such as television and film producers, freelance artists, researchers, tour companies and entrepreneurs) and modernist locals. Operating from different sites and in the context of a wide variety of socio-economic situations, these forces have perpetuated a political practice which depicts the Miao (and other minorities) as both feminized keepers of Chinese tradition and as exotic others against which the dominant Han people can assert their own superiority and modernity.
Subjects
Ethnic stratification
Cultural identity and pride
Gender status
Territorial hierarchy
Inter-community relations
Inter-ethnic relations
External relations
Political parties
Research and development
Rest days and holidays
Public lectures
Sociocultural trends
culture
Miao
HRAF PubDate
2009
Region
Asia
Sub Region
East Asia
Document Type
Book
Evaluation
Creator Type
Anthropologist
Document Rating
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
Teferi Abate Adem; 2007
Field Date
1982-1993
Coverage Date
1949-2000
Coverage Place
China
Notes
Louisa Schein
Includes bibliographical references (p. [321]-352) and index
LCCN
99036861
LCSH
Hmong (Asian people)--China/Hmong (Asian people)--China--Social life and customs/Ethnic relations--Political aspects