Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2plfb Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-27T19:27:50.094Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Islam

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 March 2010

Get access

Extract

The study of islam in china has been strongly influenced by what Lila Abu-Lughod (1989:269) termed “zones of theory” in the general Western scholarship of Islam, in which studies of the Middle Eastern “core” have been privileged over Islam on the so-called periphery. Muslims in China, relegated to the distant margins of both Sinological and Islamic scholarship, have rarely received much academic attention. This summary attempts a brief overview of past scholarship on Islam in China and recent contributions to the field. It is concerned primarily with Islam among the people known as the “Hui,” as they are the “Muslim Chinese” proper, whereas the other nine Muslim nationalities identified by the Prc government do not speak Chinese as their native languages and belong more properly to Central Asian studies. The 1990 census revealed that there are a total of 17.6 million members of the ten mainly Muslim nationalities, with the Hui numbering 8.4 million. Like the U.S. census, religion is not a category on the Chinese census, so this figure includes some members of these nationalities who may not believe in or practice the Islamic religion, as well as excluding Han and other minority nationalities who might believe in Islam. Though some Muslims, especially Uygur, complain of underreporting of their populations, this is a fairly good initial estimate of the number of Muslims in China, indicating an increase of 1.2 million over the 1982 figure, a 13 percent increase (Gladney 1991:20).

Type
Chinese ReligionsThe State of the Field, Part II. Living Religious Traditions: Taoism, Confucianism, Buddhism, Islam and Popular Religion
Copyright
Copyright © The Association for Asian Studies, Inc. 1995

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

List of References

Abu-Lubhod, Lila. 1989. “Zones of Theory in the Anthropology of the Arab World,” Annual Review of Anthropology. 18:267306.Google Scholar
Andrew, G. Findlay. 1921. The Crescent in North-West China. London: The China Inland Mission.Google Scholar
Alles-Adam, Elisabeth. 1991. “Notes sur un rituel funeraire musulman en Chine du nordest.” In La transmission du savoir dans le monde musulman peripherique. Lettre d'information. 10: 18.Google Scholar
Aubin, Françoise. 1990. “En Islam Chinois: Quels Naqshbandis?” In Gaborieau, M., Popovic, A., and Zarcone, T., eds. Naqshbandis: Chemeniments et Situation Actuelle d'Un Order Mysique Musulman pp. 491572. Istanbul and Paris: Editions Isis.Google Scholar
Aubin, Françoise. 1982. “Islam et Etat en Chine populaire.” In Carre, Olivier, ed., L'lslam et I'Etat. Paris: Presse Universitaires de France.Google Scholar
Aubin, Françoise. 1986. “Chinese Islam: In Pursuit of Its Sources.” Central Asian Survey 2: 7380.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Broomhall, Marshall. 1910. Islam in China; A Neglected Problem. New York: Paragon Book Co.Google Scholar
Chen, Ta-Sheng, ed. 1984. Islamic Inscriptions in Quanzhou. Tr. Enming, Chen. Yinchuan: Ningxia Peoples Publishing Society and Quanzhou: Fujian People's Publishing Society.Google Scholar
Chen, Ta-Sheng. 1989. “The Role of the Mosque in the Reacceptance of Islam by Muslim Descendants in Quanzhou during the Ming Dynasty.” In Gladney, Dru C., ed., The Legacy of Islam in China: An International Symposium in Memory of Joseph F. Fletcher. Conference Volume. Harvard University.Google Scholar
Ch'ing-tai Chung-kuo l-ssu-lan chiao lun-chi (Essays on Islam in China during the Ch'ing period). 1981. Ed. Philosophy, Ningxia and Social Science Institute. Yinchuan: Ningxia People's Publishing Society.Google Scholar
Chung-kuo l-ssu-lan chiao yen-chiu wen-chi (Compendium of Chinese Islamic Research). 1988. Ed. Chinese Islamic Research Committee. Yinchuan: Ningxia People's Publishing Society.Google Scholar
Fletcher, Joseph. 1975. “Central Asian Sufism and Ma Ming-hsin's New Teaching.” Proceedings of the Fourth East Asian Altaistic Conference. Ed. Ch'en Chieh-hsien. Taipei: National Taiwan University.Google Scholar
Fletcher, Joseph. 1986. “Les ‘voies’ (turuq) a soufites en Chinese.” In Popovic, Alexandre, ed., Les ordres mystiques dans l'lslam, cheminements et situation actuelle. Paris, n.p..Google Scholar
Gladney, Dru C. 1991. Muslim Chinese: Ethnic Nationalism in the People's Republic. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, Council on East Asian Studies.Google Scholar
Gladney, Dru C. 1990. “The Ethnogenesis of the Uighur.” Central Asian Survey 9. 1: 128.Google Scholar
Gladney, Dru C. 1987. “Muslim Tombs and Ethnic Folklore: Charters for Hui Identity.” Journal of Asian Studies 46. 5: 495532.Google Scholar
Gladney, Dru C. and Shouqian, Ma. 1990. “Interpretations of Islam in China: A Hui Scholar's Perspective.” Journal, Institute for Muslim Minority Affairs 10. 2: 475–86.Google Scholar
Hui-hui min-tsu wen-t'i (The Question of the Hui Nationality). 1982. Ed. Min-tsu wen-t'i Research Society. Beijing: Nationalities Publishing Society.Google Scholar
Hui-tsu chien-shih. 1978 (Brief History of the Hui). Hui-hui tsu chien-shih Editorial Committee, ed. Yinchuan: Ningxia People's Publishing Society.Google Scholar
Israeli, Raphael. 1978. Muslims in China. London & Atlantic Highlands: Curzon & Humanities Press.Google Scholar
Israeli, Raphael. 1989. “Muslims in China: Islam's Incompatibility with the Chinese Order.” In Israeli, Raphael and Johns, Anthony H., eds., Islam in Asia, Vol. Ii. Boulder, Colorado: Westview Press.Google Scholar
Israeli, Raphael. 1988. “Is There Shi'a in Chinese Islam?Journal, Institute for Muslim Minority Affairs 9 1:4966.Google Scholar
l-ssu-lan chiao tsai Chung-kuo (Islam in China) 1982. Ed. Gansu Provincial Ethnology Dept. Yinchuan: Ningxia People's Publishing Society.Google Scholar
Jin, Yijiu. (Chin I-chiu) 1989. “The System of menhuan in China: An Influence of Sufism on Chinese Muslims.” Ming Studies 13:3445.Google Scholar
Jin, Yijiu. 1985. Su-fei p'ai yii Chung-kuo men-huan” (Sufism and China's Menhuan). In Hsi-pei l-ssu-lan chiao yen-chiu (Northwest Islam Research), ed. Gansu Provincial Ethnology Department. Lanzhou: Gansu Nationality Publishing Society.Google Scholar
Lattimore, Owen. 1950. Pivot of Asia: Sinkiang and the Inner Asian Frontiers of China and Russia. Boston: Little, Brown.Google Scholar
Lattimore, Owen. 1951. Inner Asian Frontiers of China. New York: American Geographical Society.Google Scholar
Leslie, Donald Daniel. 1981. Islamic Literature in Chinese, Late Ming and Early Ch'ing: Books, Authors and Associates. Canberra: Canberra College of Advanced Education. (Ccae).Google Scholar
Leslie, Donald Daniel. 1986. Islam in Traditional China: A Short History to 1800. Canberra: Ccae.Google Scholar
Li, Hsing-Hua and Feng, Ching-Yuan, eds. 1985. Chung-kuo l-ssu-lan chiao shih ts'an-k'ao tzu-liao hsuan-pien, 1911-1949 (China Islamic History Reference Material Selections, 1911-1949). Vols. 1 & 2. Yinchuan: Ningxia People's Publishing Society.Google Scholar
Lipman, Jonathan N. 1981. “The Border World of Gansu, 1895-1935.” Ph.D. diss., Stanford University.Google Scholar
Lipman, Jonathan N. 1984a. “Ethnicity and Politics in Republican China: The Ma Family Warlords of Gansu,” Modern China 10. 3: 285316.Google Scholar
Lipman, Jonathan N. 1984b. “Patchwork Society, Network Society: A Study of Sino-Muslim Communities.” In Israeli, Raphael and Johns, Anthony H., eds., Islam in Asia, Vol. 2. Boulder: Westview Press.Google Scholar
Lombard, Denys and Claudine, Salman. 1994. “Islam and Chineseness,” Indonesia April 57:115–31.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Löwenthal, Rudolf. 1940. “The Mohammedan Press in China.” In The Religious Periodical Press in China. Peking: Synodal Committee on China.Google Scholar
Ma, Qicheng. 1983. “A Brief Account of the Early Spread of Islam in China.” Social Sciences in China 4:97113.Google Scholar
Ma, Shouqian. 1989. “The Hui People's New Awakening at the End of the 19th Century and Beginning of the 20th Century.” In Gladney, Dru C., ed., The Legacy of Islam in China: An International Symposium in Memory of Joseph F. Fletcher. Conference Volume. Harvard University.Google Scholar
Ma, T'Ung. 1983. Chung-kuo l-ssu-lan chiao-p'ai yü men-huan chih-tu shih-lueh (A history of Muslim factions and the Menhuan system in China). 1st edition, 1981. Yinchuan: Ningxia People's Publishing Society.Google Scholar
Ma, T'Ung. 1989. “China's Islamic Saintly Lineages and the Muslims of the Northwest.”In Gladney, Dru C., ed., The Legacy of Islam in China: An International Symposium in Memory of Joseph F. Fletcher. Conference Volume. Harvard University.Google Scholar
Ma, T'Ung. 1986. Chung-kuo l-ssu-lan cbiao-p'ai men-huan su-yuan (Tracing the source of China's Islamic Orders and Menhuan). Yinchuan: Ningxia People's Publishing Society.Google Scholar
Mason, Isaac. 1929. “The Mohammedans of China: When, and How, They First Came,” Journal of the North China Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society 60: 154.Google Scholar
Macinnis, Donald E. 1972. Religious Policy and Practice in Communist China. New York: MacMillan Company.Google Scholar
Macinnis, Donald E. 1989. Religion in China Today: Policy and Practice. Maryknoll: Orbis Books.Google Scholar
Mien, Wei-Ling. 1981. Ning-hsia l-ssu-lan chiao-p'ai kai-yao (An Outline of the Islamic Factions of Ning-hsia). Yinchuan: Ningxia People's Publishing Society.Google Scholar
Millward, James A. 1992. “The Sino-Soviet Border Trade in Republican Xinjiang.” Ph.D. Diss., Stanford University.Google Scholar
Pai, Shou-I. 1953. Hui-min ch'i-i (Hui Rebellions). 4 vols. Shanghai: n.p.Google Scholar
Pai, Shou-I. 1974. Hui-tsu, Hui-chiao, Hui-min lun-chi (Collected Essays on the Hui nationality, Hui religion and Hui people). Kowloon: n.p.Google Scholar
Pang, Keng-Fong. 1992. The Dynamics of Gender, Ethnicity, and State Among the Austronesian-speaking Muslims (Hui Utsat) of Hainan Island. Ph.D. diss., University of California, Los Angeles.Google Scholar
Pang, Keng-Fong. 1989. “Austronesian-speaking Hui of Hainan Island: A Southeast Asian Islamic Identity?” In Gladney, Dru C., ed., The Legacy of Islam in China: An International Symposium in Memory of Joseph F. Fletcher. Conference Volume. Harvard University.Google Scholar
Pillsbury, Barbara. 1973. “Cohesion and Cleavage in a Chinese Muslim Minority.”Ph.D. Diss., Columbia University.Google Scholar
Pillsbury, Barbara. 1979. “Being Female in a Muslim Minority in China.” In Beck, Lois and Nikki, Keddie, eds., Women in the Muslim World. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Rudelson, Justin Jon. 1992. “Bones in the Sand: The Struggle to Create Uighur Nationalist Ideologies in Xinjiang, China.” Ph.D. diss., Harvard University.Google Scholar
Yang, (Mohammed Usiar) Huai-chung. 1981. Lun shih-pa shih-chi Che-helin-yeh Mu-ssu-lin ti ch'i-i (On the 18th century Jahriyya Muslim uprisings). In Ch'ing-tai Chung-kuo l-ssu-lan chiao lun-chi (Essays on Islam in China During the Qing Period). Ed. Ningxia Philosophy and Social Science Institute. Yinchuan: Ningxia People's Publishing Society.Google Scholar
Yang, (Mohammed Usiar) Huai-chung. 1988. Lueh-lun su-fei-p'ai tsai Chung-kuo nei-ti l-ssu-lan chiao chung te fachan (Discussion of the development of Sufism in Islam within China). In Chungkuo l-ssu-lan chiao yen-chiu wen-ti (Compendium of Chinese Islamic Research). Ed. Chinese Islamic Research Committee. Yinchuan: Ningxia People's Publishing Society.Google Scholar
Yang, (Mohammed Usiar) Huai-chung. 1989. “The Eighteenth Century Gansu Relief Fraud Scandal.” In Gladney, Dru C., ed., The Legacy of Islam in China: An International Symposium in Memory of Joseph F. Fletcher. Conference Volume. Harvard University.Google Scholar
Yang, (Mohammed Usiar) Huai-chung. Forthcoming. “Sufism among the Muslims in Gansu, Ningxia, and Qinghai.” In Li, Charles and Gladney, Dru C., eds., Minority Nationalities of China: Language and Culture. Amsterdam: Mouton Press.Google Scholar