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Sino-Muslims, Networking, and Identity in Late Imperial China
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Sino-Muslims, Networking, and Identity in Late Imperial China : Longstanding Natives and Dispersed Minorities

Book Details

Format Hardback or Cased Book
ISBN-10 1032539682
ISBN-13 9781032539683
Publisher Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint Routledge
Country of Manufacture GB
Country of Publication GB
Publication Date Jul 12th, 2024
Print length 218 Pages
Weight 590 grams
Ksh 25,200.00
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This book explores the everyday life of Muslims in late imperial China, revealing how they integrated themselves into Chinese society, whilst also maintaining distinct Islamic features. It will be of interest to comparative Muslim studies, Qing and early modern China, religious and ethnic identity, and Sino-Arab relations.

This book explores the everyday life of Muslims in late imperial China proper (“Sino-Muslims”), revealing how they integrated themselves into Chinese society, while also maintaining distinct Islamic features. 

Deeming “identity” as practical, interactive, and processual, it focuses on Sino-Muslims’ daily networking practices which embodied their numerous processes of identification with people around them. Through an evaluation of such practices, it displays how, since the early seventeenth century, Sino-Muslims vigorously formed and participated in popular religious and secular networks at local, translocal, and China-wide scales, including mosques, merchant associations, gentry groups, Islamic educational and publishing networks. It demonstrates how such networks facilitated Sino-Muslims to become more aligned with the tempo of change in Chinese society and imperial governance, and created for them more ingenious venues and means to identify with Islam. Ultimately it reveals how, by the first half of the nineteenth century, a sense of collectivity—with common knowledge, memory, and discourse—was generated among dispersed Sino-Muslims. 

Utilizing Sino-Muslims’ own records such as steles, genealogies, and Chinese Islamic texts, this book will be of interest to scholars and students of comparative Muslim studies, Qing and early modern China, religious and ethnic identity, and professionals of Sino-Arab relations.


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