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Guest people : Hakka identity in China and abroad / edited by Nicole Constable.

Contributor(s): Series: Studies on ethnic groups in ChinaPublication details: Seattle : University of Washington Press, c1996.Description: x, 284 p. ; 24 cmISBN:
  • 0295974699 (alk. paper)
  • 9780295974699 (alk. paper)
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 951 20
LOC classification:
  • DS731.H3 G83 1996
Contents:
Introduction: What Does It Mean to Be Hakka? / Nicole Constable -- 1. The Hakka or "Guest People": Dialect as a Sociocultural Variable in Southeast China / Myron L. Cohen -- 2. Hakka Villagers in a Hong Kong City: The Original People of Tsuen Wan / Elizabeth Lominska Johnson -- 3. Poverty, Piety, and the Past: Hakka Christian Expressions of Hakka Identity / Nicole Constable -- 4. Form and Content in Hakka Malaysian Culture / Sharon A. Carstens -- 5. Still "Guest People": The Reproduction of Hakka Identity in Calcutta, India / Ellen Oxfeld -- 6. The Hakka Ethnic Movement in Taiwan, 1986-1991 / Howard J. Martin -- 7. The Hakka Paradox in the People's Republic of China: Exile, Eminence, and Public Silence / Mary S. Erbaugh.
Summary: Unlike the many ethnic groups classified by the Chinese government as "minority nationalities," the Hakka are officially included as part of the Han Chinese majority. The Han label obscures Hakka identity in some ways. Many Hakka know - although few non-Hakka do - that numerous prominent Chinese are Hakka, including China's paramount leader Deng Xiaoping, Taiwan's president Li Teng-hui, and former Singapore prime minister Li Kuan-yew. Colorful images and stereotypes of the Hakka abound in folklore, popular literature, and tourist brochures, as well as in academic and missionary writings. But despite the obvious importance and distinctiveness of the Hakka, until now no detailed, comparative analysis of the meaning of Hakka identity has been published.Summary: Guest People will be of interest to sinologists and scholars of Asian studies as well as to anthropologists, sociologists, and others concerned with ethnicity, migration, nationalism, and the cultural and historical construction of identity.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Books Books The Anton Library of Chinese Studies General Stacks DS731.H3 G83 1996 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) c.1 Available TBC00002439
Books Books The Anton Library of Chinese Studies General Stacks DS731.H3 G83 1996 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) c.2 Available TBC00002442

Includes bibliographical references (p. 235-267) and index.

Introduction: What Does It Mean to Be Hakka? / Nicole Constable -- 1. The Hakka or "Guest People": Dialect as a Sociocultural Variable in Southeast China / Myron L. Cohen -- 2. Hakka Villagers in a Hong Kong City: The Original People of Tsuen Wan / Elizabeth Lominska Johnson -- 3. Poverty, Piety, and the Past: Hakka Christian Expressions of Hakka Identity / Nicole Constable -- 4. Form and Content in Hakka Malaysian Culture / Sharon A. Carstens -- 5. Still "Guest People": The Reproduction of Hakka Identity in Calcutta, India / Ellen Oxfeld -- 6. The Hakka Ethnic Movement in Taiwan, 1986-1991 / Howard J. Martin -- 7. The Hakka Paradox in the People's Republic of China: Exile, Eminence, and Public Silence / Mary S. Erbaugh.

Unlike the many ethnic groups classified by the Chinese government as "minority nationalities," the Hakka are officially included as part of the Han Chinese majority. The Han label obscures Hakka identity in some ways. Many Hakka know - although few non-Hakka do - that numerous prominent Chinese are Hakka, including China's paramount leader Deng Xiaoping, Taiwan's president Li Teng-hui, and former Singapore prime minister Li Kuan-yew. Colorful images and stereotypes of the Hakka abound in folklore, popular literature, and tourist brochures, as well as in academic and missionary writings. But despite the obvious importance and distinctiveness of the Hakka, until now no detailed, comparative analysis of the meaning of Hakka identity has been published.

Guest People will be of interest to sinologists and scholars of Asian studies as well as to anthropologists, sociologists, and others concerned with ethnicity, migration, nationalism, and the cultural and historical construction of identity.

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