Modern Chinese Muslims’ increasing connections with the Islamic world conditioned and were conditioned by their elites’ integrationist politics in China. Chinese Muslims (the “Hui”) faced a predicament during the Qing and Ottoman empire-to-nation transitions, seeking both increased contact with Muslims outside China and greater physical and sociopolitical security within the new Chinese nation-state. On the one hand, new communication and transport technologies allowed them unprecedented opportunities for transnational dialogue after centuries of real and perceived isolation. On the other, the Qing’s violent suppression of Muslim uprisings in the late nineteenth century loomed over them, as did the inescapable Han-centrism of Chinese nation...
This article questions dominant understandings of “China,” “Islam,” and the relationship between the...
Today, China prides itself as a nation of fifty-six officially-recognized ethnic groups, including t...
Chinese Muslims, or the Hui people, an ethno-religious minority that straddles two civilisations, ha...
This dissertation investigates Chinese Muslim (Hui) intellectual currents from the late Qing dynasty...
In the late 1970s Islam regained its force by generating novel forms of piety and forging new paths ...
Even though China is nowhere near the heartland of Islam, the country is not a stranger to the relig...
Due to increasing liberalization following China's economic reforms, record numbers of Chinese Musli...
This study examines the process in which acculturated and dispersed Sino-Muslims in late imperial Ch...
Sino-Muslims in Qing China refers to Chinese-speaking Muslims who were natives in China proper and ...
From the Yuan to the mid-Ming period, the people of Huihui (回回人) in mainland China gradually Siniciz...
This thesis explores the history of an empire’s attempt to remake its Muslim subjects. The reconstru...
This is the final version. Available from Istanbul University Department of Sociology via the DOI in...
The ongoing resurgence of religious practice in China features an Islamic revival characterized by r...
The Hui Muslims is the largest Muslim minority ethnic group in China. During Republic of China (191...
Islam came to China via the Silk Road, the great trading route beginning in the ancient Chinese capi...
This article questions dominant understandings of “China,” “Islam,” and the relationship between the...
Today, China prides itself as a nation of fifty-six officially-recognized ethnic groups, including t...
Chinese Muslims, or the Hui people, an ethno-religious minority that straddles two civilisations, ha...
This dissertation investigates Chinese Muslim (Hui) intellectual currents from the late Qing dynasty...
In the late 1970s Islam regained its force by generating novel forms of piety and forging new paths ...
Even though China is nowhere near the heartland of Islam, the country is not a stranger to the relig...
Due to increasing liberalization following China's economic reforms, record numbers of Chinese Musli...
This study examines the process in which acculturated and dispersed Sino-Muslims in late imperial Ch...
Sino-Muslims in Qing China refers to Chinese-speaking Muslims who were natives in China proper and ...
From the Yuan to the mid-Ming period, the people of Huihui (回回人) in mainland China gradually Siniciz...
This thesis explores the history of an empire’s attempt to remake its Muslim subjects. The reconstru...
This is the final version. Available from Istanbul University Department of Sociology via the DOI in...
The ongoing resurgence of religious practice in China features an Islamic revival characterized by r...
The Hui Muslims is the largest Muslim minority ethnic group in China. During Republic of China (191...
Islam came to China via the Silk Road, the great trading route beginning in the ancient Chinese capi...
This article questions dominant understandings of “China,” “Islam,” and the relationship between the...
Today, China prides itself as a nation of fifty-six officially-recognized ethnic groups, including t...
Chinese Muslims, or the Hui people, an ethno-religious minority that straddles two civilisations, ha...