Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:635Hits:19004287Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID105179
Title ProperDaily encounters between hans and uyghurs in Xinjiang
Other Title Informationsinicization, integration or segregation
LanguageENG
AuthorCaprioni, Elena
Publication2011.
Summary / Abstract (Note)In September 2009, the Information Office of the State Council of the People's Republic of China claimed that Xinjiang benefits from respect and harmony between the ethnic groups. This rhetoric is faithfully propagated by national media: they uniformly praise the unity amongst the Han and Uyghurs through the common slogans of minzu tuanjie (ethnic unity ) and hexie guanxi (harmonious relations). Going beyond the official documents and propaganda, my purpose is to explore the relations between these two ethnic groups. I will focus on the ideas, words and actions of Han and Uyghur young people living in Urumqi who are often under-represented in official sources, or other forms of written and scholarly discourse. While comparing their behaviour, I argue that ethnic disharmony between Hans and Uyghurs exists, but it is simplistic to blame only the Chinese government or one of the ethnic groups, and naïve to ask what China can do to solve the problem. Instead, by exploring what the social agents in the young educated society in Xinjiang truly think of ethnic relations between them and the "other," this paper presents a comprehensive picture of the issue. My ethnographic research interprets how people remember, interpret and sometimes exaggerate their ethnic traditions and cultural practices in daily life in relation to the other ethnic group. The findings demonstrate how young people are determining the course of ethnic relations by constructing movable social barriers that result in segregation between them, raising doubts about the future possibilities for ethnic harmony.
`In' analytical NotePacific Affairs Vol. 84, No. 2; Jun 2011: p267-287
Journal SourcePacific Affairs Vol. 84, No. 2; Jun 2011: p267-287
Key WordsXinjian ;  Hans ;  Uyghurs ;  Ethnicity ;  Everyday Relations ;  Movable Social Barriers