Constructing Suiyuan

Constructing Suiyuan

Author: Justin Tighe

Publisher: BRILL

Published: 2021-11-29

Total Pages: 316

ISBN-13: 9047407881

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A detailed examination of the making of a new province in China's Inner Asian borderlands in the early 20th century providing new insights into the spatial and territorial aspects of modern Chinese state and nation building.


Asia

Asia

Author: United States. Geographic Names Division

Publisher:

Published: 1972

Total Pages: 146

ISBN-13:

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Transforming Inner Mongolia

Transforming Inner Mongolia

Author: Yi Wang

Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield

Published: 2021-09-21

Total Pages: 355

ISBN-13: 1538146088

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This groundbreaking book analyzes the dramatic impact of Han Chinese migration into Inner Mongolia during the Qing era. In the first detailed history in English, Yi Wang explores how processes of commercial expansion, land reclamation, and Catholic proselytism transformed the Mongol frontier long before it was officially colonized and incorporated into the Chinese state. Wang reconstructs the socioeconomic, cultural, and administrative history of Inner Mongolia at a time of unprecedented Chinese expansion into its peripheries and China’s integration into the global frameworks of capitalism and the nation-state. Introducing a peripheral and transregional dimension that links the local and regional processes to global ones, Wang places equal emphasis on broad macro-historical analysis and fine-grained micro-studies of particular regions and agents. She argues that border regions such as Inner Mongolia played a central role in China’s transformation from a multiethnic empire to a modern nation-state, serving as fertile ground for economic and administrative experimentation. Drawing on a wide range of Chinese, Japanese, Mongolian, and European sources, Wang integrates the two major trends in current Chinese historiography—new Qing frontier history and migration history—in an important contribution to the history of Inner Asia, border studies, and migrations.


The Eastern Land and the Western Heaven

The Eastern Land and the Western Heaven

Author: Fan Zhang

Publisher: Taylor & Francis

Published: 2024-01-23

Total Pages: 167

ISBN-13: 1003845754

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This book sheds light on the structure of “a unity with diversity” developed in the Qing imperial formation (1636–1912) by a case study of the Qing-Tibetan encounters in the eighteenth century. By analyzing historical and ethnographical materials, the book investigates the translation of Chinese histories and stone inscriptions into Tibetan, the transformation of the landscapes at Mount Wutai and Lhasa, and the transplantation of Chinese deities and medical practices to Tibet. It demonstrates the processes in which the cosmopolitan interlocutors reified imperial integrity while expressing their diverse longings and belongings. It concludes that the Qing’s rule over its cultural others was neither simply Sinicizing nor colonizing, but a translational process in which multivocalic actors shared narratives, landscapes, and practices, while the emperor and tantric masters performed cosmic power over humans and metahumans. This book cuts across the fields of anthropology, history, Chinese Studies, and Tibetan Studies. It reflects on the concepts of sovereignty and ethnicity, and it also extends the methodological horizon of historical anthropology.


Han-Mongol Encounters and Missionary Endeavors

Han-Mongol Encounters and Missionary Endeavors

Author: Patrick Taveirne

Publisher: Leuven University Press

Published: 2004

Total Pages: 700

ISBN-13: 9789058673657

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The study describes the origins of the Southwest Mongolia vicariate beyond the Great Wall and along the Yellow River Bend during the transition period from Lazarist missionary activities in the 1840s to the Scheutists in the early 1870