Perspectives on the Yi of Southwest China
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Perspectives on the Yi of Southwest China
(Studies on China, 26)
University of California Press, c2001
- : pbk
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Note
Bibliography: p. 283-302
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Nearly seven million Yi people live in Southwest China, but most educated people outside China have never heard of them. This book, the first scholarly study in a Western language on the Yi in four decades, brings this little-known part of the world to life. Perspectives on the Yi of Southwest China is a remarkable collection of work by both Yi and foreign scholars describing their history, traditional society, and recent social changes. In addition to being valuable as an ethnographic study, this book is also an experiment in communication among three discourses: the cosmopolitan disciplines of history and the social sciences, the Chinese discourse of ethnology and ethnohistory, and the Yi folk discourse of genealogy and ritual. This book uses the case of the Yi to conduct an international conversation across formerly isolated disciplines.
Table of Contents
List of Tables, Maps, and Figures Acknowledgments Introduction, by Stevan Harrell PART ONE: The Yi in History 1. Reconstructing Yi History from Yi Records, by Wu Gu 2. Nzymo as Seen in Some Yi Classical Books, by Wu Jingzhong PART TWO: Nuosu Society in Liangshan 3. A Comparative Approach to Lineages among the Xiao Liangshan Nuosu and Han, by Ann Maxwell Hill and Eric Diehl 4. Preferential Bilateral-Cross-Cousin Marriage among the Nuosu in Liangshan, by Lu Hui 5. Names and Genealogies among the Nuosu of Liangshan, by Ma Erzi 6. Homicide and Homicide Cases in Old Liangshan, by Qubi Shimei and Ma Erzi 7. Searching for the Heroic Age of the Yi People of Liangshan, by Liu Yu 8. On the Nature and Transmission of Bimo Knowledge in Liangshan, by Bamo Ayi PART THREE: Yi Society in Yunnan 9. The Cold Funeral of the Nisu Yi, by Li Yongxiang 10. A Valley-House: Remembering a Yi Headmanship by Erik Mueggler 11. Native Place and Ethnic Relations in Lunan Yi Autonomous County, Yunnan, by Margaret Byrne Swain PART FOUR: The Yi Today 12. Language Policy for the Yi, by David Bradley 13. Nationalities Conflict and Ethnicity in the People's Republic of China, with Special Reference to the Yi in the Liangshan Yi Autonomous Prefecture, by Thomas Heberer 14. Education and Ethnicity among the Liangshan Yi, by Martin Schoenhals 15. Nuosu Women's Economic Role in Ninglang, Yunnan, under the Reforms, by Wu Ga (Vugashynyumo Luovu) 16. The Yi Health Care System in Liangshan and Chuxiong, by Xiaoxing Liu References List of Contributors Index
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