1st Edition

The Traveling Minzu Uyghur Muslim Migration and the Negotiation of Identities

By Mei Ding Copyright 2022
230 Pages 2 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

230 Pages 2 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

230 Pages 2 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

Based on the everyday experiences of Uyghur business migrants, this book investigates how individuals embody and deploy minzu , one of the fundamental concepts in political and socioeconomic discourses in China after 1949, and how this concept travels to Australia with the migrants. Through research on Uyghurs at the Tarim (pseudonym) restaurant in Ürümchi, Uyghur migrants in other major... Read more

1. Minzu: a Key Concept in Uyghur Migration, 2. Uyghur Restaurants: Social Space and Internal Diversity, 3. Food and Body in China’s Islamophobia, 4. Multiculturalism and State Kinship, 5. Citizenship between China and Australia, 6. Becoming Australian Uyghurs

Biography

Mei Ding is an assistant professor at the School of Social Development and Public Policy in Fudan University, China. She is a social anthropologist with research interests in China’s ethnic minorities, including Muslim small and medium businesses. Her current focus is on ethnicity and medical anthropology. Her recent publications includes “Cultural Intimacy in Ethnicity” (Journal of Contemporary China, 2020) and “Security matters in Marriage” (Central Asian Survey, 2018).