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ID140290
Title ProperYokes of gold and threads of silk
Other Title Information Sino-Tibetan competition for authority in early twentieth century Kham
LanguageENG
AuthorRelyea, Scoott
Summary / Abstract (Note)Beginning in the early eighteenth century, a bifurcated structure of authority in the Kham region of ethnographic Tibet frustrated attempts by both the Lhasa and Beijing governments to assert their unquestioned control over a myriad polities in the borderlands between Sichuan and Tibet. A tenuous accommodation of this structure persisted from the early eighteenth century until the first two decades of the twentieth century when powerful globalizing norms—territoriality and sovereignty—transformed both the understanding and expectations of territorial rule held by Qing and, later, Republican Chinese officials. Absolutist conceptions of these norms prompted an ambitious endeavour to shatter the bifurcated structure and undermine the Dalai Lama's spiritual influence on Kham society. Infrontier imperialism is used to analyse the incomplete implementation of resulting acculturative and incorporative policies, inflected by these two norms, which challenged the monasteries’ indirect influence on the lay rulers of Kham, initiating a struggle for authority that persists to this day.
`In' analytical NoteModern Asian Studies Vol. 49, No.4; Jul 2015: p.963-1009
Journal SourceModern Asian Studies Vol: 49 No 4
Key WordsYokes of Gold ;  Threads of Silk ;  Sino - Tibetan Competition ;  Early Twentieth Century ;  Kham


 
 
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