March 27-30, 2003, New York
City
The Mongolia Society Annual
Meeting
Organizer
and Chair: Uradyn E. Bulag, City University of New York
Discussant: KONAGAYA Yuki, National Museum of Ethnology, Japan
yuki@idc.minpaku.ac.jp
Abstract:
Mongols in China underwent tremendous
political, economic and cultural upheavals throughout the
twentieth century, from struggles for independence or autonomy
to environmental degradation. This panel aims to discuss four
areas of inquiry: 1. the name “Inner Mongolia” given to the
territorial institution called Inner Mongolia Autonomous
Government (later called Region) in 1947 and its implication
for the identity of Mongols in China and beyond; 2. the
Chinese massacre of the Mongols in the Jindandao Incident of
1891 and the social changes brought to eastern Inner Mongolia
by subsequent Mongol and Chinese migrations; 3. the rapid
desertification of Inner Mongolia pastureland in recent years,
and issues of Mongolian philosophy regarding nature and man;
and 4. how the Tibetanized Mongols in Qinghai province have
been developing strategies to survive as a group in relation
to the state, neighboring Tibetans and Mongols. The
presenters, all Mongols hailing from China, but trained and
now teaching in Japan, will bring in new perspectives to
understanding the cultural and political processes of the
Mongols in China.
Panel Papers:
The History and the Politics of
“Nei Menggu” (Inner Mongolia)
Huhbator,
Showa Women’s University, Japan
huhbator@ma.kcom.ne.jp
After the independence of “Outer
Mongolia” in 1911, and especially after the founding of the
Mongolian People’s Republic in 1924, “Outer Mongolia” (Gadaad
Mongol in Mongolian or Wai Menggu in Chinese) became a
historical term. Inner Mongolia, on the other hand, became the
focal point of the so-called “Mongolian Question”, and its
name Dotood Mongol (M) or Nei Menggu (C) remained sinocentric,
denoting direct rule as it did in the Qing
geographical-administrative demarcation of the Mongols. The
question of naming Inner Mongolia in both Mongolian and
Chinese has thus become not only significant for the Mongols
in China, but also for Mongols in the independent state of
Mongolia. The founding of the Inner Mongolia Autonomous
Government in 1947 introduced a new name in Mongolian: instead
of Dotood Mongol, it is now called Ubur (the sunny side of
mountain) Mongol, thereby forming a geobody with Ar Mongol
(formerly Outer Mongolia), and it no longer connotes internal
administration within China. However, this change has not been
reflected in Chinese translation, as Inner Mongolia continues
to be called Nei Menggu and historist Chinese continue to
refer to Mongolia as Wai Menggu. In recent years, some Mongols
began to call Inner Mongolia “Nan Menggu”, and with it came
the change of English translation from Inner Mongolia to
Southern Mongolia.
This paper will discuss this confusion
in naming Inner Mongolia both in Mongolian original (Dotood
Mongol vs. Ubur Mongol) and in Chinese (Nei Menggu vs. Nan
Menggu). A historical scrutiny of the naming of Inner Mongolia
in the 20th century is important for understanding the
political significance of the existence of the Inner Mongolia
Autonomous Region in China and the challenges it faces.
Peasant Uprising or Ethnic
Conflict? Reexamining the Jindandao Incident in 1891
Burensain BORJIGIN, Waseda
University, Japan
achimag1@yahoo.co.jp
iac02008@mn.waseda.ac.jp
In 1891 a Chinese secret society called
Jindandao massacred numerous Mongols in the eastern part of
Inner Mongolia. In China, this massacre has been appraised as
an “anti-imperialist, anti-feudal peasant uprising”,
disguising the nature of ethnic conflict between Mongols and
Chinese. In the 1990s, however, Mongol victims of the
Jindandao incident began to demand re-evaluation of the
incident, thereby setting off a heated debate around the
issue.
Up to now, most studies of the Jindandao
Incident have relied on memorials prepared by Chinese county
and prefectual magistrates, ignoring the memorials presented
by Mongol victims. Based on new data published in the 1980s
and fieldwork in recent years, this study intends to reexamine
incident and to discuss historical circumstances and the
consequences of this massacre for the social change in Inner
Mongolia in the late 19th and early 20th century.
Towards the end of the Qing dynasty, the
region of Inner Mongolia became the main destination for
bankrupt Chinese peasants from interior China. With the
increase of Chinese immigrants, conflicts between Mongols and
Chinese intensified as Chinese struggled for more benefits and
Mongols tried to maintain their traditional social order. The
Jindandao Incident happened in the mixed Mongol-Chinese
regions under such historical circumstances. Tens of thousands
of Mongols were massacred in this incident, and the survivors
fled to the pastoral areas south of the Hinggan mountains,
propelling the agriculturalization of these regions and the
refiguration of the local societies.
Relationship Between Man and
Nature - A Hermeneutical Approach to Interpreting the
Affective Thinking of the Mongolian People
TELENGUT
Aitor, Hokkai-Gakuen University, Japan
aitoru@jin.hokkai-s-u.ac.jp
In the traditional nomadic culture of
the Mongols, their philosophy does not center around people
when it comes to relating to the environment. Instead, sky and
nature are worshipped as having the significance of a
spiritual being with a Divine soul. This way of worship
manifests itself not only in their daily greetings – Hoorhii
amitang, for example - but also is reflected in their
literature, their rituals regarding life and death, and in
historical events. Their philosophy allowed them to protect
their natural habitat, and to live in harmony with nature for
centuries; it brought them an inner world of profound peace
and tranquility. In this modern world, their natural
environment is facing destruction, and their cultural
environment is being contaminated. It is important for us to
re-evaluate these issues and redefine traditional Mongolian
worship and its meanings.
The Ethnic Reality in “Homemade
Narration”
Shinjilt, Hitotsubashi University,
Japan
shinjilt@livedoor.com
shinjilt@anthropology.soc.hit-u.ac.jp
4-25-1-311 Nishishidzu, Sakura-shi,
Chiba 285-0845, Japan
tel&fax 043-461-9610
This paper intends to analyze the
variegated narratives by “minority nationalities” in China,
hoping to understand the dynamics of their ethnic
consciousness. I focus on the Mongols in Henan Mongolian
Autonomous County of Qinghai Province(hereafter Henanmengqi)
where “Tibetanization” has been longstanding in culture and
language. In recent decades, they have been subject to the
state’s ethnic classification and thus have been conscious of
their relationship with the neighboring Tibetans and other
Mongols in and out of Qinghai. In this paper the following
themes on their daily experiences are discussed: What
significance does the nationality category of Sogpo(“Mongol”
in the Tibetan)hold for the Henanmengqi people? Who (which
group) should or should not be included in Sogpo? In what
situation does the semantic content of Sogpo change? The
Henanmengqi people are not free to choose their nationality
category, and are often caught in the conflicting
categorizations by the state administrators, scholars, other
Tibetans and Mongols. I pay particular attention to the power
dynamics in such relationships and the strategies taken by the
Henanmengqi people to negotiate with external powers to form
their nationality behaviors. Finally, I will discuss in
general the characteristics of what may be called the grammar
or reality of “homemade narration” by minority nationalities.
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