Frontier Fieldwork

Building a Nation in China’s Borderlands, 1919–45

By Andres Rodriguez
Categories: Social Sciences, Anthropology, History, World History, Regional & Cultural Studies, Asian Studies
Series: Contemporary Chinese Studies
Publisher: UBC Press
Hardcover : 9780774867559, 240 pages, October 2022
Ebook (PDF) : 9780774867573, 240 pages, October 2022
Ebook (EPUB) : 9780774867580, 240 pages, October 2022
Paperback : 9780774867566, 240 pages, May 2023

Table of contents

Introduction

1 Soldiers and Scholars on the Frontier

2 Missionary Explorers in the Field: The West China Border Research Society, 1922–37

3 Frontier Fever: Reporting from the Field

4 Chinese Anthropologists at War: Frontier Reconstruction in the Field, 1937–45

5 Service in the Field: Wartime Students and the Frontier, 1940–45

Conclusion

Glossary; Notes; Bibliography; Index

Description

The centre may hold, but borders can fray. Frontier Fieldwork explores the work of social scientists, agriculturists, photographers, and missionaries who took to the field in China’s southwest at a time when foreign political powers were contesting China’s claims over its frontiers. In the early twentieth century, when the threat of imperialism loomed large in the Sino-Tibetan borderlands, these fieldworkers undertook a nation-building exercise to unite a disparate, multi-ethnic population. Andres Rodriguez exposes the transformative power of the fieldworkers’ efforts, which placed China’s margins at the centre of its nation-making process and race to modernity.