Among China’s various Muslim groups, the Hui stand out on the basis of their ethnicity, history and location, and are considered unlike the Turkic groups in Western territories. The Hui are not confined to a definite region but are present throughout China, and exist in continuous juxtaposition with other groups. For this reason, they determine their identity by simultaneous associations to an exogenous tradition that differentiates them from other Chinese groups, and to endogenous elements that situate them as inherently Chinese. This position of the Hui at the intersection of two presumably mutually-exclusive cultural spheres, namely Muslim and Chinese, results in mode of identity-formation, which I call alibism, and in which identity is ...
The ongoing resurgence of religious practice in China features an Islamic revival characterized by r...
The Chinese-speaking Muslims have for centuries been an inseperable but anomalous part of Chinese so...
This article questions dominant understandings of “China,” “Islam,” and the relationship between the...
As a minority in China, Muslims have had to deal with a twofold problem: maintaining the boundary of...
Hui 回 is among the 10 officially recognized Islamic minzu 民族 (ethnic group; nationality) of China. T...
In this ethnographic sketch, I analyze the complex processes of Sino-Islamic identity formation by e...
This paper explores the contentious ethno-historical process of identity formation among the Hui nat...
Chinese Muslims, or the Hui people, an ethno-religious minority that straddles two civilisations, ha...
In today's geopolitical climate, when the West's gaze is fixed on radical Islam, the U.S.led “Global...
This study examines the modern history of the Hui to understand how China, a multiethnic empire-turn...
Understanding identity helps individual to understand himself/herself and knows his/her position in ...
This article examines the ethnic conflicts during the 19th century in Yunnan, China. Between 1821 an...
Today, China prides itself as a nation of fifty-six officially-recognized ethnic groups, including t...
Of all the ethnic groups in Singapore with an interstitial identity, the Chinese Muslims are the mos...
Due to increasing liberalization following China's economic reforms, record numbers of Chinese Musli...
The ongoing resurgence of religious practice in China features an Islamic revival characterized by r...
The Chinese-speaking Muslims have for centuries been an inseperable but anomalous part of Chinese so...
This article questions dominant understandings of “China,” “Islam,” and the relationship between the...
As a minority in China, Muslims have had to deal with a twofold problem: maintaining the boundary of...
Hui 回 is among the 10 officially recognized Islamic minzu 民族 (ethnic group; nationality) of China. T...
In this ethnographic sketch, I analyze the complex processes of Sino-Islamic identity formation by e...
This paper explores the contentious ethno-historical process of identity formation among the Hui nat...
Chinese Muslims, or the Hui people, an ethno-religious minority that straddles two civilisations, ha...
In today's geopolitical climate, when the West's gaze is fixed on radical Islam, the U.S.led “Global...
This study examines the modern history of the Hui to understand how China, a multiethnic empire-turn...
Understanding identity helps individual to understand himself/herself and knows his/her position in ...
This article examines the ethnic conflicts during the 19th century in Yunnan, China. Between 1821 an...
Today, China prides itself as a nation of fifty-six officially-recognized ethnic groups, including t...
Of all the ethnic groups in Singapore with an interstitial identity, the Chinese Muslims are the mos...
Due to increasing liberalization following China's economic reforms, record numbers of Chinese Musli...
The ongoing resurgence of religious practice in China features an Islamic revival characterized by r...
The Chinese-speaking Muslims have for centuries been an inseperable but anomalous part of Chinese so...
This article questions dominant understandings of “China,” “Islam,” and the relationship between the...