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Volumn 26, Issue 3, 1998, Pages 511-530

The Uighurs of the Kazakstan borderlands: Migration and the nation

Author keywords

[No Author keywords available]

Indexed keywords

IMMIGRANT POPULATION; MIGRATION; NATIONAL IDENTITY;

EID: 0032423443     PISSN: 00905992     EISSN: None     Source Type: Journal    
DOI: 10.1080/00905999808408580     Document Type: Article
Times cited : (33)

References (57)
  • 1
    • 0039535347 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Research for this article was supported in part by a grant from the International Research and Exchanges Board (IREX), with funds provided by the National Endowment for the Humanities and the U.S. Department of State. I would also like to thank the Institute of Uighur Studies under the Kazakstan Academy of Sciences for serving as my host institution during my research. In addition, I would like to thank the participants of Professor Soo-Young Chin's "Migration and Culture Change" seminar at the University of Southern California during the Fall of 1995 and Professor Azade-Ayse Rorlich for valuable feedback on many of the ideas expressed in this article. None of these organizations or individuals is responsible for the views expressed.In emphasizing this point, the political scientist Martha Brill Olcott has gone as far as to call the newly independent state a "republic of minorities." See Martha Brill Olcott, "Kazakhstan: A Republic of Minorities," in Ian Bremmer and Ray Taras, eds, Nations and Politics in the Soviet Successor States (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993).
  • 2
    • 0040720814 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Xinjiang meaning "new dominion" in Mandarin, is the name given to this area by the Chinese. Uighurs themselves usually prefer to call the area either Uighurstan, justifying Uighur control of the region, or Eastern Turkestan, which reflects the common Turkic roots of most of the region's population. For convenience, I have chosen to refer to the area here using the internationally recognized title of Xinjiang. However, in doing so, I do not refute the Uighurs' right to call their "homeland" by their own name.
  • 3
    • 0040720815 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Other Uighur diasporas that do not border on Xinjiang, however, do exist in Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Australia, western Europe, and the United States. None of these communities of Uighurs approaches the size of the one in Kazakstan.
  • 4
    • 0040126875 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • According to Soviet census figures, 185,301 Uighurs lived in Kazakstan in 1989. The figure of 200,000 is projected for the population today according to scholars at the Institute of Uighur Studies under the Kazakstan Academy of Sciences. Neither of these figures, however, reflects the unknown number of Uighur sojourners from China who presently work and live temporarily in Kazakstan.
  • 5
    • 0039704393 scopus 로고
    • Columbia, SC: University of South Carolina Press
    • In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, the Uighurs of the Ili valley on both sides of the Sino-Russian frontier were referred to as Taranchi. The etymology of this ethnonym is from the Mongol word for "wheat" - taran and the Turkic suffix chi which denotes the profession of people. This designation of "wheat farmer," which was used to describe only the Uighurs of the Ili valley both in China and Russia, was replaced by the more encompassing name of "Uighur" adopted during the Soviet period to refer to all of the native Turkic-speaking Muslim agriculturists and traders from Xinjiang. The ethnonym "Uighur" has its origins in an ancient Turkic empire of the same name that existed on the territory of present-day Xinjiang from 744 to 840 A.D. (For more about the ancient Uighurs, see Colin Mackerras, The Uighur Empire According to T'ang Dynastic Histories: A Study in Sino-Uighur Relations, 744-840 (Columbia, SC: University of South Carolina Press, 1973)) . The readoption of the name "Uighur" was spearheaded by a movement of Uighur intellectuals on the Russian side of the border at the turn of the century and was realized by Uighur communists who officially claimed the name at a meeting in Tashkent in 1921. For evidence of Uighur intellectuals' use of the ethnonym prior to Soviet rule, see Näzärghoja Abdusemätov (Uyghur Balisi), "Bizning Turmush" in Yoruq Sahillar: Tarikhiy Materiallar, Sheirlar, Proza (Almaty: Zhazushy, 1991) . For a discussion of the 1921 conference, see Abdu-Ali Kaidarov, Razvitie Sovremennogo Uigurskogo Literaturnogo lazyka (Alma-Ata: Nauka, 1969).) While a public debate continued in the Uighur community over the appropriateness of a single "Uighur" ethnic identity and language for roughly a decade, most Uighurs in the Soviet Union eventually recognized the name and their shared identity by the early 1930s (see Kaidarov, op. cit., pp. 320-335;
    • (1973) The Uighur Empire According to T'ang Dynastic Histories: A Study in Sino-Uighur Relations , pp. 744-840
    • Mackerras, C.1
  • 6
    • 4243308038 scopus 로고
    • Bizning Turmush
    • Almaty: Zhazushy
    • In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, the Uighurs of the Ili valley on both sides of the Sino-Russian frontier were referred to as Taranchi. The etymology of this ethnonym is from the Mongol word for "wheat" - taran and the Turkic suffix chi which denotes the profession of people. This designation of "wheat farmer," which was used to describe only the Uighurs of the Ili valley both in China and Russia, was replaced by the more encompassing name of "Uighur" adopted during the Soviet period to refer to all of the native Turkic-speaking Muslim agriculturists and traders from Xinjiang. The ethnonym "Uighur" has its origins in an ancient Turkic empire of the same name that existed on the territory of present-day Xinjiang from 744 to 840 A.D. (For more about the ancient Uighurs, see Colin Mackerras, The Uighur Empire According to T'ang Dynastic Histories: A Study in Sino-Uighur Relations, 744-840 (Columbia, SC: University of South Carolina Press, 1973)) . The readoption of the name "Uighur" was spearheaded by a movement of Uighur intellectuals on the Russian side of the border at the turn of the century and was realized by Uighur communists who officially claimed the name at a meeting in Tashkent in 1921. For evidence of Uighur intellectuals' use of the ethnonym prior to Soviet rule, see Näzärghoja Abdusemätov (Uyghur Balisi), "Bizning Turmush" in Yoruq Sahillar: Tarikhiy Materiallar, Sheirlar, Proza (Almaty: Zhazushy, 1991) . For a discussion of the 1921 conference, see Abdu-Ali Kaidarov, Razvitie Sovremennogo Uigurskogo Literaturnogo lazyka (Alma-Ata: Nauka, 1969).) While a public debate continued in the Uighur community over the appropriateness of a single "Uighur" ethnic identity and language for roughly a decade, most Uighurs in the Soviet Union eventually recognized the name and their shared identity by the early 1930s (see Kaidarov, op. cit., pp. 320-335;
    • (1991) Yoruq Sahillar: Tarikhiy Materiallar, Sheirlar, Proza
    • Abdusemätov, N.1
  • 7
    • 0040126873 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Alma-Ata: Nauka
    • In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, the Uighurs of the Ili valley on both sides of the Sino-Russian frontier were referred to as Taranchi. The etymology of this ethnonym is from the Mongol word for "wheat" - taran and the Turkic suffix chi which denotes the profession of people. This designation of "wheat farmer," which was used to describe only the Uighurs of the Ili valley both in China and Russia, was replaced by the more encompassing name of "Uighur" adopted during the Soviet period to refer to all of the native Turkic-speaking Muslim agriculturists and traders from Xinjiang. The ethnonym "Uighur" has its origins in an ancient Turkic empire of the same name that existed on the territory of present-day Xinjiang from 744 to 840 A.D. (For more about the ancient Uighurs, see Colin Mackerras, The Uighur Empire According to T'ang Dynastic Histories: A Study in Sino-Uighur Relations, 744-840 (Columbia, SC: University of South Carolina Press, 1973)) . The readoption of the name "Uighur" was spearheaded by a movement of Uighur intellectuals on the Russian side of the border at the turn of the century and was realized by Uighur communists who officially claimed the name at a meeting in Tashkent in 1921. For evidence of Uighur intellectuals' use of the ethnonym prior to Soviet rule, see Näzärghoja Abdusemätov (Uyghur Balisi), "Bizning Turmush" in Yoruq Sahillar: Tarikhiy Materiallar, Sheirlar, Proza (Almaty: Zhazushy, 1991) . For a discussion of the 1921 conference, see Abdu-Ali Kaidarov, Razvitie Sovremennogo Uigurskogo Literaturnogo lazyka (Alma-Ata: Nauka, 1969).) While a public debate continued in the Uighur community over the appropriateness of a single "Uighur" ethnic identity and language for roughly a decade, most Uighurs in the Soviet Union eventually recognized the name and their shared identity by the early 1930s (see Kaidarov, op. cit., pp. 320-335;
    • (1969) Razvitie Sovremennogo Uigurskogo Literaturnogo Lazyka
    • Kaidarov, A.-A.1
  • 8
    • 0040126873 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, the Uighurs of the Ili valley on both sides of the Sino-Russian frontier were referred to as Taranchi. The etymology of this ethnonym is from the Mongol word for "wheat" - taran and the Turkic suffix chi which denotes the profession of people. This designation of "wheat farmer," which was used to describe only the Uighurs of the Ili valley both in China and Russia, was replaced by the more encompassing name of "Uighur" adopted during the Soviet period to refer to all of the native Turkic-speaking Muslim agriculturists and traders from Xinjiang. The ethnonym "Uighur" has its origins in an ancient Turkic empire of the same name that existed on the territory of present-day Xinjiang from 744 to 840 A.D. (For more about the ancient Uighurs, see Colin Mackerras, The Uighur Empire According to T'ang Dynastic Histories: A Study in Sino-Uighur Relations, 744-840 (Columbia, SC: University of South Carolina Press, 1973)) . The readoption of the name "Uighur" was spearheaded by a movement of Uighur intellectuals on the Russian side of the border at the turn of the century and was realized by Uighur communists who officially claimed the name at a meeting in Tashkent in 1921. For evidence of Uighur intellectuals' use of the ethnonym prior to Soviet rule, see Näzärghoja Abdusemätov (Uyghur Balisi), "Bizning Turmush" in Yoruq Sahillar: Tarikhiy Materiallar, Sheirlar, Proza (Almaty: Zhazushy, 1991) . For a discussion of the 1921 conference, see Abdu-Ali Kaidarov, Razvitie Sovremennogo Uigurskogo Literaturnogo lazyka (Alma-Ata: Nauka, 1969).) While a public debate continued in the Uighur community over the appropriateness of a single "Uighur" ethnic identity and language for roughly a decade, most Uighurs in the Soviet Union eventually recognized the name and their shared identity by the early 1930s (see Kaidarov, op. cit., pp. 320-335;
    • Razvitie Sovremennogo Uigurskogo Literaturnogo Lazyka , pp. 320-335
    • Kaidarov1
  • 10
    • 0003612535 scopus 로고
    • Boston: Little, Brown & Co.
    • On the Chinese side of the border, the Uighur ethnonym and the unified national identity it represented were only officially accepted in 1934 when a resolution adopting the name was passed by the Provincial Government of Xinjiang (see Owen Lattimore, Pivot of Asia: Sinkiang and the Inner Asian Frontiers of China and Russia (Boston: Little, Brown & Co., 1950), p. 125).
    • (1950) Pivot of Asia: Sinkiang and the Inner Asian Frontiers of China and Russia , pp. 125
    • Lattimore, O.1
  • 11
    • 0040720811 scopus 로고
    • Moscow: Nauka, originally published in
    • Russians and other European travelers have described the relative ease with which they were able to cross this border in their writings (for examples, see V. V. Radlov, Ot Sibiri: Stranitsa Dnevnika (Moscow: Nauka, 1989), originally published in 1893; Eugene Schuyler, Turkistan (New York: Scribner, Armstrong & Co., 1876)). The Kazak ethnographer Chokan Valikhanov even noted having had trouble finding the Chinese border post during his trip to Kuldja in 1856 (see Chokan Valikhanov, Izbrannye proizvedenia (Moscow: Izdat Nauka, 1987)).
    • (1893) Ot Sibiri: Stranitsa Dnevnika
    • Radlov, V.V.1
  • 12
    • 0013151012 scopus 로고
    • New York: Scribner, Armstrong & Co.
    • Russians and other European travelers have described the relative ease with which they were able to cross this border in their writings (for examples, see V. V. Radlov, Ot Sibiri: Stranitsa Dnevnika (Moscow: Nauka, 1989), originally published in 1893; Eugene Schuyler, Turkistan (New York: Scribner, Armstrong & Co., 1876)). The Kazak ethnographer Chokan Valikhanov even noted having had trouble finding the Chinese border post during his trip to Kuldja in 1856 (see Chokan Valikhanov, Izbrannye proizvedenia (Moscow: Izdat Nauka, 1987)).
    • (1876) Turkistan
    • Schuyler, E.1
  • 13
    • 0040720813 scopus 로고
    • Moscow: Izdat Nauka
    • Russians and other European travelers have described the relative ease with which they were able to cross this border in their writings (for examples, see V. V. Radlov, Ot Sibiri: Stranitsa Dnevnika (Moscow: Nauka, 1989), originally published in 1893; Eugene Schuyler, Turkistan (New York: Scribner, Armstrong & Co., 1876)). The Kazak ethnographer Chokan Valikhanov even noted having had trouble finding the Chinese border post during his trip to Kuldja in 1856 (see Chokan Valikhanov, Izbrannye proizvedenia (Moscow: Izdat Nauka, 1987)).
    • (1987) Izbrannye Proizvedenia
    • Valikhanov, C.1
  • 14
    • 0039535346 scopus 로고
    • The history of the Ili crisis
    • Moscow: Progress Publishers
    • This treaty between the Chinese and Russian imperial governments returned the Kuldja area of Xinjiang to China after having been under Russian jurisdiction for ten years. The Russians had annexed the region in 1871 in order to quell a successful Muslim rebellion against Chinese rule in the area, which they feared might spread to their neighboring Muslim territories. See B. P. Gurevich, "The History of the Ili Crisis," in Chapters from the History of Russo-Chinese Relations, 17th-18th Centuries (Moscow: Progress Publishers, 1985), pp. 301-326; Malik Niiazovich Kabirov, Pereselenie Iliiskikh Uigur v Semirech'e (Alma-Ata: Izdat. AN Kaz. SSR, 1951), pp. 38-62.
    • (1985) Chapters from the History of Russo-chinese Relations, 17th-18th Centuries , pp. 301-326
    • Gurevich, B.P.1
  • 15
    • 0039535344 scopus 로고
    • Pereselenie Iliiskikh Uigur v Semirech'e
    • This treaty between the Chinese and Russian imperial governments returned the Kuldja area of Xinjiang to China after having been under Russian jurisdiction for ten years. The Russians had annexed the region in 1871 in order to quell a successful Muslim rebellion against Chinese rule in the area, which they feared might spread to their neighboring Muslim territories. See B. P. Gurevich, "The History of the Ili Crisis," in Chapters from the History of Russo-Chinese Relations, 17th-18th Centuries (Moscow: Progress Publishers, 1985), pp. 301-326; Malik Niiazovich Kabirov, Pereselenie Iliiskikh Uigur v Semirech'e (Alma-Ata: Izdat. AN Kaz. SSR, 1951), pp. 38-62.
    • (1951) Alma-ata: Izdat. AN Kaz. SSR , pp. 38-62
    • Kabirov, M.N.1
  • 16
    • 0038942868 scopus 로고
    • Dogovor Mezhdu Rossiei i Kitaem ob Iliiskom Krae s. Peterburg, 12/24 Fevralia 1881 g
    • Moscow
    • The treaty stipulated that any residents of the Kuldja area who wished to emigrate to Russian territory before the Kuldja region was returned to Chinese rule should have the right to do so. See "Dogovor Mezhdu Rossiei i Kitaem ob Iliiskom Krae S. Peterburg, 12/24 Fevralia 1881 g," in Sbornik Dogovorov Rossii s Drugimi Gosudarstvami: 1856-1917 (Moscow, 1952); Kabirov, Pereselenie Iliiskikh Uigur v Semirech'e, p. 82.
    • (1952) Sbornik Dogovorov Rossii s Drugimi Gosudarstvami: 1856-1917
  • 17
    • 84906412522 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • The treaty stipulated that any residents of the Kuldja area who wished to emigrate to Russian territory before the Kuldja region was returned to Chinese rule should have the right to do so. See "Dogovor Mezhdu Rossiei i Kitaem ob Iliiskom Krae S. Peterburg, 12/24 Fevralia 1881 g," in Sbornik Dogovorov Rossii s Drugimi Gosudarstvami: 1856-1917 (Moscow, 1952); Kabirov, Pereselenie Iliiskikh Uigur v Semirech'e, p. 82.
    • Pereselenie Iliiskikh Uigur v Semirech'e , pp. 82
    • Kabirov1
  • 18
    • 0038942867 scopus 로고
    • Ekonomicheskoe polozhenie Zapadnogo Kitaia
    • See A. Afanas'ev-Kazanskii, "Ekonomicheskoe polozhenie Zapadnogo Kitaia," Novyi Vostok, No. 3, 1923, pp. 114-121; I. Gabit-Gabitov, "Ekonomicheskoe polozhenie Kitaiskogo Turkestana," Novyi Vostok, Nos 8-9, 1925, pp. 26-39.
    • (1923) Novyi Vostok , vol.3 , pp. 114-121
    • Afanas'ev-Kazanskii, A.1
  • 19
    • 25544455102 scopus 로고
    • Ekonomicheskoe polozhenie Kitaiskogo Turkestana
    • See A. Afanas'ev-Kazanskii, "Ekonomicheskoe polozhenie Zapadnogo Kitaia," Novyi Vostok, No. 3, 1923, pp. 114-121; I. Gabit-Gabitov, "Ekonomicheskoe polozhenie Kitaiskogo Turkestana," Novyi Vostok, Nos 8-9, 1925, pp. 26-39.
    • (1925) Novyi Vostok , vol.8-9 , pp. 26-39
    • Gabit-Gabitov, I.1
  • 20
    • 0010613088 scopus 로고
    • Lanham, MD: University Press of America
    • An unknown, but significant, number of Uighurs and others fled the Soviet Union for Xinjiang during the 1930s. This migration was similar to that which anthropologist Audrey Shalinsky has described in her account of the Uzbeks who left the Soviet Union for Afghanistan during the same period. See Audrey Shalinsky, Long Years of Exile: Central Asian Refugees in Afghanistan and Pakistan (Lanham, MD: University Press of America, 1994).
    • (1994) Long Years of Exile: Central Asian Refugees in Afghanistan and Pakistan
    • Shalinsky, A.1
  • 21
    • 0038942866 scopus 로고
    • Transnational Islam and Uighur national identity: Salaman Rushdie, Sino-Muslim missile deals, and the trans-Eurasian railway
    • This subject has been addressed elsewhere both directly in writings about the Uighurs (see Dru C. Gladney, "Transnational Islam and Uighur National Identity: Salaman Rushdie, Sino-Muslim Missile Deals, and the Trans-Eurasian Railway," Central Asian Survey, Vol. 11, No. 3, 1992, pp. 1-21; "The Muslim Face of China," Current History, September 1993, pp. 275-280; Justin Rudelson, "The Uighurs and the Future of Central Asia," Nationalities Papers, Vol. 22, No. 2, 1994) and indirectly in work on Chinese - Central Asian relations (see Lillian Craig Harris, "Xinjiang, Central Asia and the Implications for China's Policy in the Islamic World," The China Quarterly, No. 133, March 1993, pp. 111-129; Keith Martin, "China and Central Asia: Between Seduction and Suspicion," RFE/RL Research Reports, Vol. 3, No. 25, 24 June 1994) .
    • (1992) Central Asian Survey , vol.11 , Issue.3 , pp. 1-21
    • Gladney, D.C.1
  • 22
    • 0038942866 scopus 로고
    • The muslim face of China
    • September
    • This subject has been addressed elsewhere both directly in writings about the Uighurs (see Dru C. Gladney, "Transnational Islam and Uighur National Identity: Salaman Rushdie, Sino-Muslim Missile Deals, and the Trans-Eurasian Railway," Central Asian Survey, Vol. 11, No. 3, 1992, pp. 1-21; "The Muslim Face of China," Current History, September 1993, pp. 275-280; Justin Rudelson, "The Uighurs and the Future of Central Asia," Nationalities Papers, Vol. 22, No. 2, 1994) and indirectly in work on Chinese - Central Asian relations (see Lillian Craig Harris, "Xinjiang, Central Asia and the Implications for China's Policy in the Islamic World," The China Quarterly, No. 133, March 1993, pp. 111-129; Keith Martin, "China and Central Asia: Between Seduction and Suspicion," RFE/RL Research Reports, Vol. 3, No. 25, 24 June 1994) .
    • (1993) Current History , pp. 275-280
  • 23
    • 0028588197 scopus 로고
    • The Uighurs and the future of central asia
    • This subject has been addressed elsewhere both directly in writings about the Uighurs (see Dru C. Gladney, "Transnational Islam and Uighur National Identity: Salaman Rushdie, Sino-Muslim Missile Deals, and the Trans-Eurasian Railway," Central Asian Survey, Vol. 11, No. 3, 1992, pp. 1-21; "The Muslim Face of China," Current History, September 1993, pp. 275-280; Justin Rudelson, "The Uighurs and the Future of Central Asia," Nationalities Papers, Vol. 22, No. 2, 1994) and indirectly in work on Chinese - Central Asian relations (see Lillian Craig Harris, "Xinjiang, Central Asia and the Implications for China's Policy in the Islamic World," The China Quarterly, No. 133, March 1993, pp. 111-129; Keith Martin, "China and Central Asia: Between Seduction and Suspicion," RFE/RL Research Reports, Vol. 3, No. 25, 24 June 1994) .
    • (1994) Nationalities Papers , vol.22 , Issue.2
    • Rudelson, J.1
  • 24
    • 34248241347 scopus 로고
    • Xinjiang, central asia and the implications for China's policy in the Islamic world
    • March
    • This subject has been addressed elsewhere both directly in writings about the Uighurs (see Dru C. Gladney, "Transnational Islam and Uighur National Identity: Salaman Rushdie, Sino-Muslim Missile Deals, and the Trans-Eurasian Railway," Central Asian Survey, Vol. 11, No. 3, 1992, pp. 1-21; "The Muslim Face of China," Current History, September 1993, pp. 275-280; Justin Rudelson, "The Uighurs and the Future of Central Asia," Nationalities Papers, Vol. 22, No. 2, 1994) and indirectly in work on Chinese - Central Asian relations (see Lillian Craig Harris, "Xinjiang, Central Asia and the Implications for China's Policy in the Islamic World," The China Quarterly, No. 133, March 1993, pp. 111-129; Keith Martin, "China and Central Asia: Between Seduction and Suspicion," RFE/RL Research Reports, Vol. 3, No. 25, 24 June 1994) .
    • (1993) The China Quarterly , vol.133 , pp. 111-129
    • Harris, L.C.1
  • 25
    • 0038942866 scopus 로고
    • China and central asia: Between seduction and suspicion
    • 24 June
    • This subject has been addressed elsewhere both directly in writings about the Uighurs (see Dru C. Gladney, "Transnational Islam and Uighur National Identity: Salaman Rushdie, Sino-Muslim Missile Deals, and the Trans-Eurasian Railway," Central Asian Survey, Vol. 11, No. 3, 1992, pp. 1-21; "The Muslim Face of China," Current History, September 1993, pp. 275-280; Justin Rudelson, "The Uighurs and the Future of Central Asia," Nationalities Papers, Vol. 22, No. 2, 1994) and indirectly in work on Chinese - Central Asian relations (see Lillian Craig Harris, "Xinjiang, Central Asia and the Implications for China's Policy in the Islamic World," The China Quarterly, No. 133, March 1993, pp. 111-129; Keith Martin, "China and Central Asia: Between Seduction and Suspicion," RFE/RL Research Reports, Vol. 3, No. 25, 24 June 1994) .
    • (1994) RFE/RL Research Reports , vol.3 , Issue.25
    • Martin, K.1
  • 26
    • 84951389488 scopus 로고
    • The Ethnogenesis of the Uighur
    • See Dru C. Gladney, "The Ethnogenesis of the Uighur," Central Asian Survey, Vol. 9, No. 1, 1990 pp. 1-28; Denise Helly, "The Identity and Nationality Problem in Chinese Central Asia," Central Asian Survey, Vol. 53, No. 4, 1986, pp. 241-254; Justin Rudelson, Bones in the Sand: The Struggle to Create Uighur Nationalist Ideologies in Xinjiang, China, PhD Dissertation, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, 1992.
    • (1990) Central Asian Survey , vol.9 , Issue.1 , pp. 1-28
    • Gladney, D.C.1
  • 27
    • 84951389488 scopus 로고
    • The identity and nationality problem in Chinese central asia
    • See Dru C. Gladney, "The Ethnogenesis of the Uighur," Central Asian Survey, Vol. 9, No. 1, 1990 pp. 1-28; Denise Helly, "The Identity and Nationality Problem in Chinese Central Asia," Central Asian Survey, Vol. 53, No. 4, 1986, pp. 241-254; Justin Rudelson, Bones in the Sand: The Struggle to Create Uighur Nationalist Ideologies in Xinjiang, China, PhD Dissertation, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, 1992.
    • (1986) Central Asian Survey , vol.53 , Issue.4 , pp. 241-254
    • Helly, D.1
  • 28
    • 84951389488 scopus 로고
    • PhD Dissertation, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA
    • See Dru C. Gladney, "The Ethnogenesis of the Uighur," Central Asian Survey, Vol. 9, No. 1, 1990 pp. 1-28; Denise Helly, "The Identity and Nationality Problem in Chinese Central Asia," Central Asian Survey, Vol. 53, No. 4, 1986, pp. 241-254; Justin Rudelson, Bones in the Sand: The Struggle to Create Uighur Nationalist Ideologies in Xinjiang, China, PhD Dissertation, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, 1992.
    • (1992) Bones in the Sand: The Struggle to Create Uighur Nationalist Ideologies in Xinjiang, China
    • Rudelson, J.1
  • 29
    • 0002363716 scopus 로고
    • Introduction
    • Fredrik Barth, ed., Boston: Little, Brown & Co.
    • The boundaries referred to here are the social lines of separation that groups of people form between each other and should not be confused with the physically delineated political boundaries that states create between each other. For more on the construction and maintenance of ethnic boundaries, see Fredrik Barth, "Introduction," in Fredrik Barth, ed., Ethnic Groups and Boundaries: The Social Organization of Culture Difference (Boston: Little, Brown & Co., 1969), pp. 7-38.
    • (1969) Ethnic Groups and Boundaries: The Social Organization of Culture Difference , pp. 7-38
    • Barth, F.1
  • 30
    • 36549049778 scopus 로고
    • Making national cultures in the global Ecumene
    • Robert Foster, "Making National Cultures in the Global Ecumene," Annual Review of Anthropology, Vol. 20, 1991, pp. 239-240.
    • (1991) Annual Review of Anthropology , vol.20 , pp. 239-240
    • Foster, R.1
  • 31
    • 0006258186 scopus 로고
    • 'From tribe to Umma': Comments on the dynamics of identity in Muslim soviet central asia
    • These designations are fluid, as group identification is determined through oppositional relations. Even today, for example, the kegänlär are often referred to as khitailiklär by the local yerliklär and as sovetliklär (Soviet) by the khitailiklär sojourners. In turn, they all often refer to themselves and each other as Uighurs or as Muslims when encountering those of different ethnic or religious groups. These complex shifts in self-identification have long been common in Central Asia, where local, religious, tribal, and national identities are conflated and often in conflict. Hence, self-identification is usually expressed situationally. See, for example, M. Nazif Shahrani, "'From Tribe to Umma': Comments on the Dynamics of Identity in Muslim Soviet Central Asia," Central Asian Survey, Vo. 3, No. 3, 1984, pp. 27-38.
    • (1984) Central Asian Survey , vol.3 , Issue.3 , pp. 27-38
    • Shahrani, M.N.1
  • 32
    • 0039535342 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • In addition to my observations and in-depth interviews, I have used information gathered from a survey questionnaire given to Uighurs in Kazakstan who migrated from China in the 1950s and 1960s. I would like to express my gratitude to Khadiia Akhmetova of the Institute of Uighur Studies under the Academy of Sciences of Kazakstan for helping me to write and distribute this questionnaire and Sahinur Dautova of the same Institute for aiding in the transcription of my interviews. The identity of all interviewees and questionnaire respondents cited in this article has been kept anonymous.
  • 33
    • 0040126872 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • This video documentary looks at the experiences of three kegänlär Uighurs in Kazakstan who now make a living trading Chinese goods. It addresses many of the issues in this article by looking at the personal experiences of migration and the changing Uighur identity and culture in Kazakstan which are emerging from the trade between China and Kazakstan. In fact, many of the citations from interviews that appear here are taken from the video.
  • 34
    • 0040126870 scopus 로고
    • Yeqin Otmushing Qanliq Khatirsi
    • 28 May
    • Shämsidin Abdurehim-Ughli, "Yeqin Otmushing Qanliq Khatirsi," Yengi Hayat, 28 May 1994, p. 7. The estimate offered in this source should be questioned given that the official population figures for Uighurs in the Soviet Union as a whole according to the 1989 census was only 285,000. Furthermore, the author, who offers his information in an impassioned nationalist-inspired newspaper article, does not cite any primary source for his claims. Most Uighurs in the former Soviet Union, however, do agree that slightly more than half of the Uighurs in post-Soviet Central Asia came to the region from China during the 1950s and 1960s.
    • (1994) Yengi Hayat , pp. 7
    • Abdurehim-Ughli, S.1
  • 35
    • 84909359127 scopus 로고
    • New York: M. E. Sharpe
    • Many of those who left for political reasons were also participants in the government or army of the Eastern Turkestan Republic (ETR), a Soviet-backed semi-autonomous state that governed the three vilayäts surrounding the city of Kuldja from 1944 to 1949. While the Chinese communists had originally recruited local cadres from the ranks of the ETR's government, these cadres were soon looked upon with suspicion by the authorities in Beijing, who feared their connections to the Soviet Union and their nationalist aspirations. For more about the ETR, see Linda Benson, The Ili Rebellion: The Moslem Challenge to Chinese Authority in Xinjiang, 1944-1949 (New York: M. E. Sharpe, 1990).
    • (1990) The Ili Rebellion: The Moslem Challenge to Chinese Authority in Xinjiang, 1944-1949
    • Benson, L.1
  • 37
    • 0038942862 scopus 로고
    • Ethnic minorities in the Sino-Soviet dispute
    • William McCagg and Brian D. Silver, eds, New York: Pergamon Press
    • The protest apparently resulted from a rumor that the border with the Soviet Union was to be closed. As the number of protesters grew, Chinese soldiers arrived to disperse the crowd. In the frenzy that followed the conflict between the protesters and Chinese soldiers, many were killed and some 60,000-80,000 Uighurs, Kazaks, and others fled to the Soviet Union across the Ili valley border crossing at Khorgus, which had been opened by Soviet officials. See June Teufel Dryer, "Ethnic Minorities in the Sino-Soviet Dispute," in William McCagg and Brian D. Silver, eds, Soviet Asian Ethnic Frontiers (New York: Pergamon Press, 1979), pp. 208-209; Harris, "Xinjiang, Central Asia and the Implications for China's Policy in the Islamic World," p. 115; George Moseley, A Sino-Soviet Cultural Frontier: The Ili Kazakh Autonomous Chou (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1966), p. 109; Rasma Silde-Karklins, "The Uighurs Between China and the USSR," Canadian Slavonic Papers, Vol. 19, 1975, p. 344.
    • (1979) Soviet Asian Ethnic Frontiers , pp. 208-209
    • Dryer, J.T.1
  • 38
    • 0039535339 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • The protest apparently resulted from a rumor that the border with the Soviet Union was to be closed. As the number of protesters grew, Chinese soldiers arrived to disperse the crowd. In the frenzy that followed the conflict between the protesters and Chinese soldiers, many were killed and some 60,000-80,000 Uighurs, Kazaks, and others fled to the Soviet Union across the Ili valley border crossing at Khorgus, which had been opened by Soviet officials. See June Teufel Dryer, "Ethnic Minorities in the Sino-Soviet Dispute," in William McCagg and Brian D. Silver, eds, Soviet Asian Ethnic Frontiers (New York: Pergamon Press, 1979), pp. 208-209; Harris, "Xinjiang, Central Asia and the Implications for China's Policy in the Islamic World," p. 115; George Moseley, A Sino-Soviet Cultural Frontier: The Ili Kazakh Autonomous Chou (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1966), p. 109; Rasma Silde-Karklins, "The Uighurs Between China and the USSR," Canadian Slavonic Papers, Vol. 19, 1975, p. 344.
    • Xinjiang, Central Asia and the Implications for China's Policy in the Islamic World , pp. 115
    • Harris1
  • 39
    • 0040720808 scopus 로고
    • Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press
    • The protest apparently resulted from a rumor that the border with the Soviet Union was to be closed. As the number of protesters grew, Chinese soldiers arrived to disperse the crowd. In the frenzy that followed the conflict between the protesters and Chinese soldiers, many were killed and some 60,000-80,000 Uighurs, Kazaks, and others fled to the Soviet Union across the Ili valley border crossing at Khorgus, which had been opened by Soviet officials. See June Teufel Dryer, "Ethnic Minorities in the Sino-Soviet Dispute," in William McCagg and Brian D. Silver, eds, Soviet Asian Ethnic Frontiers (New York: Pergamon Press, 1979), pp. 208-209; Harris, "Xinjiang, Central Asia and the Implications for China's Policy in the Islamic World," p. 115; George Moseley, A Sino-Soviet Cultural Frontier: The Ili Kazakh Autonomous Chou (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1966), p. 109; Rasma Silde-Karklins, "The Uighurs Between China and the USSR," Canadian Slavonic Papers, Vol. 19, 1975, p. 344.
    • (1966) A Sino-Soviet Cultural Frontier: The Ili Kazakh Autonomous Chou , pp. 109
    • Moseley, G.1
  • 40
    • 0040720806 scopus 로고
    • The Uighurs between China and the USSR
    • The protest apparently resulted from a rumor that the border with the Soviet Union was to be closed. As the number of protesters grew, Chinese soldiers arrived to disperse the crowd. In the frenzy that followed the conflict between the protesters and Chinese soldiers, many were killed and some 60,000-80,000 Uighurs, Kazaks, and others fled to the Soviet Union across the Ili valley border crossing at Khorgus, which had been opened by Soviet officials. See June Teufel Dryer, "Ethnic Minorities in the Sino-Soviet Dispute," in William McCagg and Brian D. Silver, eds, Soviet Asian Ethnic Frontiers (New York: Pergamon Press, 1979), pp. 208-209; Harris, "Xinjiang, Central Asia and the Implications for China's Policy in the Islamic World," p. 115; George Moseley, A Sino-Soviet Cultural Frontier: The Ili Kazakh Autonomous Chou (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1966), p. 109; Rasma Silde-Karklins, "The Uighurs Between China and the USSR," Canadian Slavonic Papers, Vol. 19, 1975, p. 344.
    • (1975) Canadian Slavonic Papers , vol.19 , pp. 344
    • Rasma, S.-K.1
  • 41
    • 0039535343 scopus 로고
    • London: Macmillan & Co.
    • During World War II, a stronger notion of a multinational Soviet patriotism was forged by the Soviet government. The danger of betraying this patriotism was demonstrated by the Soviet state's post-war mass relocation of entire nationalities, such as the Koreans, Chechens, and Crimean Tatars, who were accused of collaboration with Axis forces (see Robert Conquest, The Soviet Deportations of Nationalities (London: Macmillan & Co., I960)). While the early Khrushchev years were marked by a more relaxed attitude towards non-Russians, by 1961, Khrushchev had announced the increased sblianie, or rapprochement, of nationalities which was occurring in the Soviet Union under socialism and the eventual slyanie, or merging, of nationalities which could be expected in the near future (see, for example, Grey Hodnett, ed., Resolutions and Decisions of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, Vol.4: The Khrushchev Years (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1974)). Given the recent history of the relocation of "disloyal" nationalities, the growing anti-Chinese propaganda in the Soviet Union, and Khrushchev's articulation of the ideal of a merging Soviet nation, one can understand why yerliklär Uighurs would have emphasized their "Sovietness" in the 1950s and 1960s.
    • (1960) The Soviet Deportations of Nationalities
    • Conquest, R.1
  • 42
    • 84919102960 scopus 로고
    • Toronto: University of Toronto Press
    • During World War II, a stronger notion of a multinational Soviet patriotism was forged by the Soviet government. The danger of betraying this patriotism was demonstrated by the Soviet state's post-war mass relocation of entire nationalities, such as the Koreans, Chechens, and Crimean Tatars, who were accused of collaboration with Axis forces (see Robert Conquest, The Soviet Deportations of Nationalities (London: Macmillan & Co., I960)). While the early Khrushchev years were marked by a more relaxed attitude towards non-Russians, by 1961, Khrushchev had announced the increased sblianie, or rapprochement, of nationalities which was occurring in the Soviet Union under socialism and the eventual slyanie, or merging, of nationalities which could be expected in the near future (see, for example, Grey Hodnett, ed., Resolutions and Decisions of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, Vol.4: The Khrushchev Years (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1974)). Given the recent history of the relocation of "disloyal" nationalities, the growing anti-Chinese propaganda in the Soviet Union, and Khrushchev's articulation of the ideal of a merging Soviet nation, one can understand why yerliklär Uighurs would have emphasized their "Sovietness" in the 1950s and 1960s.
    • (1974) Resolutions and Decisions of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, Vol.4: The Khrushchev Years , vol.4
    • Hodnett, G.1
  • 43
    • 0038942865 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • One yerliklär woman now in her thirties told me that the emphasis on the Soviet Union as the only rodina, or homeland, of Soviet citizens was especially strong at her school in Kazakstan's Uighur raion, which borders on China. She even remembers two of her male classmates in the sixth grade running away from home to launch their own "secret mission" against the Chinese. The two young "patriots" were returned home by soldiers who found them before they had reached China.
  • 44
    • 0040720807 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • "1.5 generation" is a term used widely in literature about Asian American immigrants to describe those people who moved to their host country after birth and before adolescence.
  • 45
    • 0003906476 scopus 로고
    • San Francisco: Spinsters/Aunt Lute
    • This liminal condition fostered by life in a borderland region has been eloquently evoked by the Chicana writer Gloria Anzaldua, who, in reference to the U.S.-Mexican borderlands, calls this the condition of "the new mestiza." See Gloria Anzaldua, Borderlands/La Frontera: The New Mestiza (San Francisco: Spinsters/Aunt Lute, 1987).
    • (1987) Borderlands/La Frontera: The New Mestiza
    • Anzaldua, G.1
  • 46
    • 0040720809 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Ironically, however, both groups also evoke Leninist revolutionary strategies. "The Association for a Free Uighurstan" has a Central Committee, and the "United Revolutionary Front of Eastern Turkestan" claims to have ties with an underground paramilitary nationalist group in Xinjiang which they call Iskra.
  • 47
    • 0039535341 scopus 로고
    • Prava Uigurov v Semirech'e dolzhny byt' zaschischeny zakonom
    • Kabirov's most controversial work on this subject was a short book that he finished writing in 1987 called The Uighurs - An Indigenous People of Semirech'e: A Sketch and Essay. After submitting this book to the state publishing house, however, he was reprimanded by the Central Committee of Kazakstan for fomenting ethnic conflict. The book was never published, but parts of it did appear in the now defunct controversial Kazakstan newspaper Birlesu. See Kabirov, "Prava Uigurov v Semirech'e dolzhny byt' zaschischeny zakonom," Birlesu, No. 78, 1992, pp. 18-31.
    • (1992) Birlesu , vol.78 , pp. 18-31
    • Kabirov1
  • 48
    • 0039535345 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • This is the Turkic version of kafir, an Arabic term denoting non-Muslims.
  • 49
    • 0040126868 scopus 로고
    • Poddel'naia Zhizn', ili Duraki - Nemy! My - Ne Duraki?
    • 16 March
    • The word "Barakholka" comes from the Russian word for junk or old things - barakhlo. During the late Soviet period, "barakholkas" were places where old goods were bought and sold. Since the opening of the former Soviet Union to international trade of all sorts, however, they have become the central marketplaces for small-scale merchants who travel to other countries on tourist visas to buy inexpensive consumer goods and then resell them. The importance of this trade to Kazakstan was recently illustrated by an article in Kazakstan's most popular newspaper, Karavan, which cited Alimzhan Seidamarovich, director of the Almaty Center for Standardization, as saying, "we do not have a market economy; we have a barakholka economy." See Lolita Bazilevskaia, "Poddel'naia Zhizn', ili Duraki - Nemy! My - ne Duraki?" Karavan, 16 March 1995, p. 8.
    • (1995) Karavan , pp. 8
    • Bazilevskaia, L.1
  • 53
    • 0002909136 scopus 로고
    • Notes on the global Ecumene
    • For more on the increasingly deterritorialized nature of national identity, see Ulf Hannerz, "Notes on the Global Ecumene," Public Culture, Vol. 1, No. 2, 1989, pp. 66-75; Arjun Appadurai, "Global Ethnoscapes: Notes and Queries for a Transnational Anthropology," in Richard Fox, ed. Recapturing Anthropology (Santa Fe: SAR Press, 1991), pp. 191-210; Robert Foster, "Making National Cultures in the Global Ecumene," Annual Review of Anthropology, Vol. 20, 1991, pp. 235-260; Linda Basch, Nina Glick Shiller and Cristina Szanton Blanc, Nations Unbound: Transnational Projects, Postcolonial Predicaments, and Deterritorialized Nation-States (Amsterdam: Gordon & Breach, 1994).
    • (1989) Public Culture , vol.1 , Issue.2 , pp. 66-75
    • Hannerz, U.1
  • 54
    • 0002512007 scopus 로고
    • Global ethnoscapes: Notes and queries for a transnational anthropology
    • Richard Fox, ed. Santa Fe: SAR Press
    • For more on the increasingly deterritorialized nature of national identity, see Ulf Hannerz, "Notes on the Global Ecumene," Public Culture, Vol. 1, No. 2, 1989, pp. 66-75; Arjun Appadurai, "Global Ethnoscapes: Notes and Queries for a Transnational Anthropology," in Richard Fox, ed. Recapturing Anthropology (Santa Fe: SAR Press, 1991), pp. 191-210; Robert Foster, "Making National Cultures in the Global Ecumene," Annual Review of Anthropology, Vol. 20, 1991, pp. 235-260; Linda Basch, Nina Glick Shiller and Cristina Szanton Blanc, Nations Unbound: Transnational Projects, Postcolonial Predicaments, and Deterritorialized Nation-States (Amsterdam: Gordon & Breach, 1994).
    • (1991) Recapturing Anthropology , pp. 191-210
    • Appadurai, A.1
  • 55
    • 36549049778 scopus 로고
    • Making national cultures in the global ecumene
    • For more on the increasingly deterritorialized nature of national identity, see Ulf Hannerz, "Notes on the Global Ecumene," Public Culture, Vol. 1, No. 2, 1989, pp. 66-75; Arjun Appadurai, "Global Ethnoscapes: Notes and Queries for a Transnational Anthropology," in Richard Fox, ed. Recapturing Anthropology (Santa Fe: SAR Press, 1991), pp. 191-210; Robert Foster, "Making National Cultures in the Global Ecumene," Annual Review of Anthropology, Vol. 20, 1991, pp. 235-260; Linda Basch, Nina Glick Shiller and Cristina Szanton Blanc, Nations Unbound: Transnational Projects, Postcolonial Predicaments, and Deterritorialized Nation-States (Amsterdam: Gordon & Breach, 1994).
    • (1991) Annual Review of Anthropology , vol.20 , pp. 235-260
    • Foster, R.1
  • 56
    • 0004099719 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Amsterdam: Gordon & Breach
    • For more on the increasingly deterritorialized nature of national identity, see Ulf Hannerz, "Notes on the Global Ecumene," Public Culture, Vol. 1, No. 2, 1989, pp. 66-75; Arjun Appadurai, "Global Ethnoscapes: Notes and Queries for a Transnational Anthropology," in Richard Fox, ed. Recapturing Anthropology (Santa Fe: SAR Press, 1991), pp. 191-210; Robert Foster, "Making National Cultures in the Global Ecumene," Annual Review of Anthropology, Vol. 20, 1991, pp. 235-260; Linda Basch, Nina Glick Shiller and Cristina Szanton Blanc, Nations Unbound: Transnational Projects, Postcolonial Predicaments, and Deterritorialized Nation-States (Amsterdam: Gordon & Breach, 1994).
    • (1994) Nations Unbound: Transnational Projects, Postcolonial Predicaments, and Deterritorialized Nation-states
    • Basch, L.1    Shiller, N.G.2    Blanc, C.S.3


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