Pure and True
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David R. Stroup
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Edited by:
Stevan Harrell
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Funded by:
University of Washington Libraries
Author / Editor information
David Stroup is assistant professor of Chinese politics at the University of Manchester. He received his PhD in political science from the University of Oklahoma in 2017. This is his first book.Harrell Stevan :
Stevan Harrell is professor emeritus of anthropology and environmental and forest sciences at the University of Washington. He is the author of Ways of Being Ethnic in Southwest China (University of Washington Press, 2001) and An Ecological History of Modern China (University of Washington Press, 2023); and editor of the University of Washington Press book series Studies on Ethnic Groups in China.
David R. Stroup is lecturer in Chinese politics at the University of Manchester.
Reviews
"Pure and True successfully bridges the gap between academic and non academic audiences. While the book is primarily written for scholars and students in fields such as Chinese studies, anthropology, and political science, Stroup’s accessible writing style makes it appealing to a broader audience. Pure and True provides timely insights for scholars, policymakers, and general readers, reminding us that ethnic identity is not fixed but shaped by the ebb and flow of daily life under a powerful state."
"Exceptional...Pure and True effectively opens up a thought-provoking perspective and new backdrop to make sense of Muslims (and other faith groups) in the era of Xi Jinping."
"In this clear and informative account, David Stroup is sensitive to diversity and the perils of generalization."
"Despite the complexities present within Huí studies, Stroup has managed to weave an impressively accessible narrative, offering an excellent introduction to the Huí for those new to the subject while also granting an intimate insight into Huí identity for those with experience in the field. Well-grounded in prior research—both the specific field of Huí studies and also the broader field of Chinese urban development—and acutely aware of its potential limitations (specifically Stroup's own status as a non-Muslim white American), this volume is a worthy addition to the ever-growing field of Huí studies."
"This book offers a comparative, detailed, and thoughtful critique of China’s ethnic politics in the context of China’s urban transformation and migration…By meticulously documenting mundane everyday life concerns, Pure and True does an excellent job of decentering the ethnic or religious identity as the only predominant factor that shapes China’s heterogenous Hui communities."
"Every once in a while, one comes across a book that presents, in addition to new information and thought-provoking theorization, a precious opportunity for contemplating the great distance one's field has travelled...Stroup's accessible ethnographic descriptions and clear analyses render the book an essential reference for both general readers and established academics."
"Stroup’s prose is lucid and pleasant to read, and his artful anecdotes from fieldwork draw the reader effectively into the midst of the issue at hand. It is rare that a study of ethnicity in China captures the everydayness, even the superficial banality, of negotiating difference, while showing that, under the surface, important tensions continue to simmer."
"Stroup does a fabulous job personalizing his subjects while keeping a professional distance from them. He also grounds his observations in history, rooting his research not only in the field of Hui studies but in the history of urban development in China more broadly...His deep and thorough fieldwork allows him to draw from a multitude of different interviews from his four research sites (the Chinese cities of Beijing, Jinan, Yinchuan, and Xining) to make insightful and thoughtful conclusions about the ways that Hui Muslims negotiate the expression of their “everyday ethnicity.""
"[A]n excellent book written against all odds."
"Makes an important contribution by focusing on the everyday politics of Hui identity, rather than the usual emphasis on ethnic contentious politics and resistance."—Isabelle Côté, Memorial University of Newfoundland
"The subject is timely and becoming even more relevant considering the Chinese Communist Party’s increasingly invasive measures to curb the perceived threat of Islamification."—Timothy A. Grose, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology
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Frontmatter
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Contents
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Foreword
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Preface
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Acknowledgments
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Introduction
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chapter one “God Is a Drug”
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chapter two Ch oosing
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chapter three Talking
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chapter four Consuming
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chapter five Performing
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Conclusion Drawing Lines between Devotion and Danhua
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Epilogue Eth nic Politics during th e “People’s War on Terror”
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Appendix A
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Appendix B
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Appendix C
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Glossary of Chinese Terms
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Notes
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Bibliography
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Index
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