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Concord and Conflict: the Hui Communities of Yunnan Society in a Historical Perspective

Wang, Jianping (1996)
Abstract
This dissertation studies the historical relation between the Muslim minority and the non-Muslim majority in Yunnan with a combined method: historical criticism supplemented by ethnological interpretation. This relation manifests in history dynamic and dialectical characteristics: concord and conflict. Concord can be found in the stable and balanced periods in the relevant socio-cultural aspects of the two groups; also, concord exists in the form of Islamic institutions and in the loose network between the widely dispersed Hui communities. Conflict can be seen in unstable and unbalanced situations in different ethno-religious aspects of the two societies; also, conflict goes through the framework of the diverse Hui communities and mosaic... (More)
This dissertation studies the historical relation between the Muslim minority and the non-Muslim majority in Yunnan with a combined method: historical criticism supplemented by ethnological interpretation. This relation manifests in history dynamic and dialectical characteristics: concord and conflict. Concord can be found in the stable and balanced periods in the relevant socio-cultural aspects of the two groups; also, concord exists in the form of Islamic institutions and in the loose network between the widely dispersed Hui communities. Conflict can be seen in unstable and unbalanced situations in different ethno-religious aspects of the two societies; also, conflict goes through the framework of the diverse Hui communities and mosaic Islamic features, even among different fractions within the same community. On the other hand, concord may exist in an unstable and unbalanced situation, and conflict in a time of stability and balance. Under these complicated conditions, Islam in Yunnan shows clear features of syncretism: a Hui form of Islam. Elements have merged, and aspects been amplified when they were similar or shared between Islam and Chinese religions. The Hui have preserved and defended the kernel of their Central Asian Islamic heritage, which differed strongly from the Chinese religious traditions. But some elements that were incompatible with Islam did infiltrate into Hui communities. On the other hand, by a contrary force, these elements could also be excluded by the power of Islam, reinforced by the communication of the Hui society internally and externally, in a long seesaw transcultural contact process. (Less)
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author
supervisor
opponent
  • unknown], [unknown
publishing date
type
Thesis
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Världsreligioner (ej kristendom), Non-Christian religions, Confucianism, Syncretism, Central Asia, Conflict, Concord, Ethnic Minority, Han, Culture, History, Religion, Society, Community, China, Yunnan, Muslim, Hui, Islam
pages
294 pages
publisher
Almqvist & Wiksell International
defense location
Teologiska institutionen sal 218
defense date
1996-05-24 10:15:00
external identifiers
  • other:ISRN: LUHFDA / HFRH -- 96/1014 -- SE+296
ISBN
91-22-01718-6
language
English
LU publication?
no
additional info
The information about affiliations in this record was updated in December 2015. The record was previously connected to the following departments: History and Anthropology of Religions (015017025)
id
a599d43c-5ec5-495b-ae01-068874f3e882 (old id 17602)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 16:33:42
date last changed
2018-11-21 20:42:22
@phdthesis{a599d43c-5ec5-495b-ae01-068874f3e882,
  abstract     = {{This dissertation studies the historical relation between the Muslim minority and the non-Muslim majority in Yunnan with a combined method: historical criticism supplemented by ethnological interpretation. This relation manifests in history dynamic and dialectical characteristics: concord and conflict. Concord can be found in the stable and balanced periods in the relevant socio-cultural aspects of the two groups; also, concord exists in the form of Islamic institutions and in the loose network between the widely dispersed Hui communities. Conflict can be seen in unstable and unbalanced situations in different ethno-religious aspects of the two societies; also, conflict goes through the framework of the diverse Hui communities and mosaic Islamic features, even among different fractions within the same community. On the other hand, concord may exist in an unstable and unbalanced situation, and conflict in a time of stability and balance. Under these complicated conditions, Islam in Yunnan shows clear features of syncretism: a Hui form of Islam. Elements have merged, and aspects been amplified when they were similar or shared between Islam and Chinese religions. The Hui have preserved and defended the kernel of their Central Asian Islamic heritage, which differed strongly from the Chinese religious traditions. But some elements that were incompatible with Islam did infiltrate into Hui communities. On the other hand, by a contrary force, these elements could also be excluded by the power of Islam, reinforced by the communication of the Hui society internally and externally, in a long seesaw transcultural contact process.}},
  author       = {{Wang, Jianping}},
  isbn         = {{91-22-01718-6}},
  keywords     = {{Världsreligioner (ej kristendom); Non-Christian religions; Confucianism; Syncretism; Central Asia; Conflict; Concord; Ethnic Minority; Han; Culture; History; Religion; Society; Community; China; Yunnan; Muslim; Hui; Islam}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Almqvist & Wiksell International}},
  title        = {{Concord and Conflict: the Hui Communities of Yunnan Society in a Historical Perspective}},
  year         = {{1996}},
}