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Blog Entries

From the Middle East to the Middle Kingdom (6)

From Warlords to Communists (1913–1949 and Beyond)

Newfound solidarity: China became a republic, Hui warlords enforced a new Islamic reform movement, and an innovative <em>minzu</em> policy gave the Hui official status as a minority nationality.

ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs | December 12, 2024

[…] China Journal) In this piece, I discuss how the discursive construction of the northern frontier culture anonymises ethnicity and foregrounds locality. I suggest that the making and promotion of a territory-based and de-ethnicised northern frontier culture marginalise and deterritorialise the titular group: ethnic Mongols from Inner Mongolia. US-China competition will challenge Europe in 2025 […]

ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs | March 26, 2020

<p>Life on Lockdown in China  (March 23, 2020, The New Yorker)<br /> A sign read “Shoe Sole Disinfecting Area,” and there was always a trail of wet prints leading away from the mat, like a footbath at a public swimming pool.</p>

ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs | February 22, 2018

<p>China’s Hui Muslims fearful Chinese New Year education ban a sign of curbs to come  (February 16, 2018, <em>Reuters</em>)<br /> a ban on young people engaging in religious education in mosques is an unwelcome interference in how they lead their lives.</p>

Chinese Christian Voices

Protestantism and the Future of China

[…] reforms may or may not be headed. He then draws on the writings of German sociologist Max Weber to understand the current situation in China today, to the point of comparing contemporary Chinese society with the German Weimar Republic. Finally, he argues that the main contribution Protestantism can make to the development of China is constitutional government.</p>

Blog Entries

Is Confucianism a Religion or an Ethical System?

The Debate Goes On

<p>In the 17<sup>th</sup> and 18<sup>th</sup> centuries there was a dispute between Jesuit and Dominican missionaries in China about whether or not Chinese converts should be allowed to continue practicing traditional rites and ceremonies that were rooted in Confucianism, such as ancestor worship. The Jesuits said they should be allowed; the Dominicans said no.</p>

ZGBriefs

December 27, 2013

[…] 2013, ChinaSource Blog)</p> <p>Christmas is a global holiday, and it looks pretty much the same wherever goes is in the world. Including China. Once banned as a sign of bourgeois decadence, Christmas has made a roaring comeback in the Middle Kingdom. A recent article in the official English daily Global Times looked at why China celebrates […]

Blog Entries

How Are Your TCKs Doing?

In the past 18 months, our family has lived in six borrowed homes in two states. This has been the result of planning, packing, obtaining visas, multiple COVID tests, and then being denied the needed green code <em>twice</em> in our attempts to return to China

ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs | October 3, 2019

[…] calls for investigation into torture  (September 27, 2019, The Guardian) Wang Meiyu, 38, was detained in July after he stood outside the Hunan provincial police department holding a sign that called on Xi and Chinese premier Li Keqiang to resign and implement universal suffrage in China. He was later charged with “picking quarrels and provoking trouble,” […]

Blog Entries

Counting by Sevens—Re-entry into China

[…] in the international arrivals area are in full PPE with goggles and face shields. The passengers are gradually deplaned and guided through a series of stages—a QR code for customs, an on-site COVID test (both nose and throat samples), immigration (who checked every page of my passport to make sure I had not been […]