Nationalism and Revolution in Mongolia

Nationalism and Revolution in Mongolia
Author: Owen Lattimore,Sh Nachukdorji
Publsiher: Brill Archive
Total Pages: 210
Release: 1955
Genre: Mongolia
ISBN: 9182736450XXX

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Nationalism and Revolution in Mongolia

Nationalism and Revolution in Mongolia
Author: Owen Lattimore
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 135
Release: 1855
Genre: Electronic Book
ISBN: OCLC:902557738

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Nationalism and Hybridity in Mongolia

Nationalism and Hybridity in Mongolia
Author: Uradyn Erden Bulag
Publsiher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 330
Release: 1998
Genre: Ethnology
ISBN: 0198233574

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Uradyn Bulag presents a unique study of what it means to be Mongolian today. Mongolian nationalism, emerging from a Soviet-dominated past and facing a Chinese-threatened future, has led its adherents to stress purity in an effort to curb the outside influences on Mongolian culture andidentity. This sort of nationalism views the Halh (the 'indigenous' Mongols) as 'pure' Mongols, and other Mongol groups as 'impure'. This Halh-centrism excites and exploits fears that Mongolia will be swallowed by China; it stands in opposition to pan-Mongolism, the view that links between Mongolsof all kinds should be strengthened. Bulag draws on an abundance of illuminating research findings to argue that Mongols are facing a choice between a purist, racialized nationalism, inherited from Soviet discourses of nationalism, and a more open, adaptive nationalism which accepts diversity,hybridity, and multiculturalism. He calls into question the idea of Mongolia as a homogeneous place and people, and urges that unity should be sought through acknowledgement of diversity.

The Mongolian People s Republic

The Mongolian People s Republic
Author: Robert Arthur Rupen
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 84
Release: 1966
Genre: Mongolia
ISBN: UCAL:B4519917

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The Mongols at China s Edge

The Mongols at China s Edge
Author: Uradyn E. Bulag
Publsiher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Total Pages: 287
Release: 2002-04-03
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 9781461644835

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This important study explores the multifaceted Mongol experience in China, past and present. Combining insights from anthropology, history, and postcolonial criticism, Uradyn Bulag avoids romanticizing Mongols either as pacified primitive Other or as gallant resistance fighters. Rather, he portrays them as a people whose communist background and standing in China's northern borderlands has informed their political efforts to harness or confront Chinese nationalistic and political hegemony. Breaking new ground in the study of Chinese and Mongol history and ethnicity, the author offers a fresh interpretation of China viewed from the perspective of its peripheries, and of minority nationalities in relation to the study of Chinese representation and minority self-representation. The author interrogates received wisdom about Chinese and minority nationalism by unraveling the Chinese discourse and practice of 'national unity.' He shows how the discourse was constructed over time through political rituals and sexuality in relation to Mongols and other non-Chinese peoples that hark back to Chinese-Xiongnu confrontations two millennia ago and Manchu conquest in the 17th and 18th centuries. Titular rulers of an autonomous region in which they constitute a minority, Mongols face enormous barriers in building and maintaining a socialist Mongolian nationality and a Mongolian language and culture. Acknowledging these difficulties, Bulag discusses a range of sensitive issues including the imbrication of nation, class, and ethnicity in the context of Mongol-Chinese relations, tensions inherent in writing a postrevolutionary history for a socialist nationality, and the moral dilemma of building a socialist model with Mongol characteristics. Charting the interface between a state-centered multinational Chinese polity and a primordial nationalist multiculturalism that aims to manage minority nationalities as 'cultures,' he explores Mongol ethnopolitical strategies to preserve their heritage.

Socialist and Post Socialist Mongolia

Socialist and Post   Socialist Mongolia
Author: Simon Wickhamsmith,Phillip P. Marzluf
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 265
Release: 2021-03-04
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781000337273

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This book re-examines the origins of modern Mongolian nationalism, discussing nation building as sponsored by the socialist Mongolian People’s Revolutionary Party and the Soviet Union and emphasizing in particular the role of the arts and the humanities. It considers the politics and society of the early revolutionary period and assesses the ways in which ideas about nationhood were constructed in a response to Soviet socialism. It goes on to analyze the consequences of socialist cultural and social transformations on pastoral, Kazakh, and other identities and outlines the implications of socialist nation building on post-socialist Mongolian national identity. Overall, Socialist and Post-Socialist Mongolia highlights how Mongolia’s population of widely scattered seminomadic pastoralists posed challenges for socialist administrators attempting to create a homogenous mass nation of individual citizens who share a set of cultural beliefs, historical memories, collective symbols, and civic ideas; additionally, the book addresses the changes brought more recently by democratic governance.

Nationalism and Localism

Nationalism and Localism
Author: Christopher Pratt Atwood
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 380
Release: 1990
Genre: Electronic Book
ISBN: IND:30000027571235

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Reins of Liberation

Reins of Liberation
Author: Xiaoyuan Liu
Publsiher: Stanford University Press
Total Pages: 524
Release: 2006
Genre: History
ISBN: 0804754268

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The author's purpose in writing this book is to use the Mongolian question to illuminate much larger issues of twentieth-century Asian history: how war, revolution, and great-power rivalries induced or restrained the formation of nationhood and territoriality. He thus continues the argument he made in Frontier Passages that on its way to building a communist state, the CCP was confronted by a series of fundamental issues pertinent to China's transition to nation-statehood. The book's focus is on the Mongolian question, which ran through Chinese politics in the first half of the twentieth century. Between the Revolution of 1911 and the Communists' triumph in 1949, the course of the Mongolian question best illustrates the genesis, clashes, and convergence of Chinese and Mongolian national identities and geopolitical visions.