03412nam 22005173 450 991097824660332120250224120843.01-04-079088-71-003-69354-71-04-079678-890-485-5637-610.1515/9789048556373(CKB)37499099600041(MiAaPQ)EBC31901210(Au-PeEL)EBL31901210(DE-B1597)724990(DE-B1597)9789048556373(OCoLC)1463214172(EXLCZ)993749909960004120250224d2025 uy 0engur|||||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierCultural Security in Contemporary China and Mongolia1st ed.Amsterdam :Amsterdam University Press,2025.©2025.1 online resource (0 pages)94-6372-288-2 Frontmatter -- Table of Contents -- Foreword -- 1. The Cultural Security of Ethnic Groups in Contemporary China and Mongolia -- 2. Cultural Security in the People’s Republic of China : Between Party- State Invocation and Academic Theorization -- 3. Taking Sides : Differences in How the People’s Republic of China Securitizes Uyghur and Hui Muslims -- 4. Muslims with Chinese Characteristics: The Sinicization of Ningxia after 2017 -- 5. Big Bad Wolf: Masculinity and Heroes in Modern Uyghur Literature -- 6. Language Ideologies and Cultural Security : The Status and Meanings of the Uyghur Language -- 7. Local Cultural Inclusion and Partnership Assistance to Tibet : A Case Study on Lunang Township’s Tourism Development Project -- 8. Adaptation of the Offering to the Mountain Deity among the Qiang in Northwest Sichuan: Cultural Security on Multiple Levels -- 9. Against the Flattening of Ridges and Ravines : (Dis)locating Cultural Security through Writing with the Yi of Southwest China -- 10. Hong Kong and Scalable Cultural Security -- 11. Cultural Survival and National Identity in Contemporary Mongolia -- IndexCultural Security in Contemporary China and Mongolia applies the term “cultural security” not exclusively to state- or institution-implemented processes, but also considers the indigenous, bottom-up, and inside-out mechanisms of establishing and maintaining communal cultural security of an ethnic group. Markers of cultural identity differ according to an inside and outside perspective and can be re-defined according to inner or outer circumstances. Importance of these markers increases when a community feels endangered in their cultural existence, or diminishes when perceived cultural identity is not questioned. The dynamics shaping cultural security are illustrated in examples of ethnic communities in the People’s Republic of China and in Mongolia.POLITICAL SCIENCE / Human Rightsbisacshcultural security, identity, ethnic policy, China, Asia.POLITICAL SCIENCE / Human Rights.951.004Ptácková Jarmila1335711Klimes Ondrej1634786MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910978246603321Cultural Security in Contemporary China and Mongolia4335592UNINA