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Ruling the Mongols of Manchuria

Language, Literacy, and Power in Late Qing Borderlands

9789463727075
364 pages
Amsterdam University Press
Overview
At the turn of the twentieth century, the Jirim League witnessed a linguistic wrestle between Manchu, Mongol, Chinese, Japanese, and Russian powers. The Qing Empire envisioned a trilingual educational system, with the aim of improving the Jirim Mongols’ ability to read Chinese, Manchu, and Mongolian. Through this policy, the Qing sought to transform loyal imperial subjects into modern patriotic nationals and incorporate them into an integrated and united China under a Manchu constitutional monarchy. The late Qing’s linguistic practice for ruling the Mongols of Manchuria was an attempt to cope with the enduring legacies in Qing administration and people’s everyday life, growing local ethnic tensions, cross-boundary connections, imperial rivalries, and the rise of new ideas concerning nation, modern state, and international relations in East Asia. This book challenges the notion of Chinese language reform as a story of linear progress towards national monolingualism, unfolds the power of multilingualism in Chinese nationalist discourse from a peripheral, non–Han Chinese perspective, and questions the extent to which national languages dominate the writing of history.
Author Bio
Dr. HE Jiani is an assistant professor at Peking University, specializing in studies of borderlands and frontiers, the politics of language, and history of China’s foreign relations in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.