Wednesday, July 28, 2021

new book - changing funeral traditions, urban China

Hong Kong-based anthropologist author publishes - $29 in paperback or free as ebook (choice of PDF, Epub, or mobi - for Kindle & other reading devices).

https://luminosoa.org/site/books/m/10.1525/luminos.105/

The Funeral of Mr. Wang
Life, Death, and Ghosts in Urbanizing China
 by Andrew B. Kipnis

In rural China funerals are conducted locally, on village land by village elders. But in urban areas, people have neither land for burials nor elder relatives to conduct funerals. Chinese urbanization, which has increased drastically in recent decades, involves the creation of cemeteries, state-run funeral homes, and small private funerary businesses. The Funeral of Mr. Wang examines social change in urbanizing China through the lens of funerals, the funerary industry, and practices of memorialization. It analyzes changes in family life, patterns of urban sociality, transformations in economic relations, the politics of memorialization, and the echoes of these changes in beliefs about the dead and ghosts.

     "This book is highly original and addresses a topic of central importance to understanding Chinese family life and the limits of a party-state's regulatory power over the society and individual citizens. Original and systematic fieldwork is expertly used to illustrate core arguments. To my knowledge there is no competing ethnography." — Deborah Davis, Professor Emerita of Sociology, Yale University

     "The Funeral of Mr. Wang is a vivid portrait of how the transition from life to death is negotiated in the midst of a rapidly transforming urban Chinese society. Showing how death in contemporary China generates interconnected processes of cultural recombination among family members, funeral service providers, bureaucratic regulators, strangers, and ghosts, this book will be critical reading for all students of China and of death in contemporary societies." — David A. Palmer, coauthor of The Religious Question in Modern China

Thursday, July 22, 2021

More Uyghur documenters, U. British Columbia: Xinjiang Documentation Project

[cross-posting from the listserv for East Asia Anthropology 22 July]

... excellent words from Dr. Guldana Salimjan, who is a professor in the Gender, Sexuality, and Women's Studies department at Simon Fraser University, as well as co-director of the Xinjiang Documentation Project (https://xinjiang.sppga.ubc.ca/) at the University of British Columbia. She is a Kazakh scholar originally from Xinjiang.

[EXCERPT to give opening lines]
What China Studies Scholars Can Do about the Xinjiang Crisis
        University of Westminster Contemporary China blog, July 21, 2021

Special commentary

Written by Guldana Salimjan

In 2019, at a dinner conversation with several established China scholars, I mentioned that it is dangerous for me to return to China and do further research because of the dire situation in Xinjiang. A professor from China was puzzled, 'Why is that? I go back to my field site every year!' I sighed but quickly explained to her, 'Because right now the government has campaigns targeting Turkic Muslim people, and I am from one of these communities.' She still expressed disbelief and continued, 'But you are not Uyghur—they are outrageous.' I was utterly shocked this time and my mind went blank.

Friday, July 16, 2021

Documentary lens on Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region since 2017

=-=-=-= Documenting the Undocumentable: China's Re-Education Camps. BY YI CHEN.
Documentary magazine, AUGUST 18, 2020.

=-=-=-= Summer 2021 The Uyghur Chronicles, https://www.theatlantic.com/the-uyghur-chronicles/

=-=-=-= Different subject: Uyghur poets. These sessions are connected to the people included in the dragnet pulling so many lives into confinement of body and mind:
The Uyghur Poets. Heart and Soul. BBC Radio, Fri 16 July 2021. https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/w3ct2gj2
+ Joshua L. Freeman thread on the poetry of Tahir Hamut Izgil https://twitter.com/jlfreeman6/status/1415646458926313472

=-=-=-= Reference list (live document updated regularly): Online bibliography on the genocide in the Uyghur region (East Turkestan): https://uhrp.org/bibliography/

Friday, July 9, 2021

This month marks 100 years of the CCP

Feature story on July 9, 2021 at National Public Radio's morning show, Morning Edition, {about 6 minutes playing time)

A few hours after broadcast many of the radio stories are put into transcript form to share or copy/paste.