1st Edition

Cultural Exclusion in China State Education, Social Mobility and Cultural Difference

By Lin Yi Copyright 2008
    192 Pages 2 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    192 Pages 2 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Ethnic minorities form a very substantial proportion of the population of China, with over 100 million people in 55 formally designated minority groups inhabiting over 60% of the country’s land area. Poverty and economic inequality of minority groups are widely-recognised problems. However, as this book, based on extensive original research, shows, underlying economic inequality are educational inequality and cultural exclusion, which in turn lead to problems of social mobility and thereby to poverty. The book examines in particular Tibetan, Muslim Hui, Salar and Bonan people. It discusses the policy and practice of education for ethnic minorities, the prevailing chauvinistic Chinese national culture, from which minorities feel excluded, and the attitudes of both majority Han Chinese towards minorities, and of minorities towards their position of cultural exclusion. Besides exploring the forms of cultural exclusion experienced by ethnic minorities, it considers what might be done to promote inclusion, proposing a rethinking of the project of nation building and modernisation of state and minority rights in order to achieve the goal of including the minority population of distinctive cultures into wider society.

    1. Introduction  2. The Trajectories of Chinese Culturalism and its Educational Legacy  3. Ethnicization through Schooling: The Mainstream Discursive Repertoires of Ethnic Minority Cultures  4. Choosing between ‘Ordinary’ and Minorities: The Tibetan Case  5. The Social Engagement of ‘Familiar Strangers’: The Muslim Case  6. Conclusion  Postscript: Promoting Education by NGOs? 

    Biography

    Lin Yi is Associate Professor of Sociology at Xiamen University. His current research focuses upon culture, inequality and boundaries, with particular reference to class, ethnicity and globalization. Lin’s articles have appeared in such journals as China Quarterly and Japanese Journal of Political Science.