民族学刊
民族學刊
민족학간
2014年
3期
120~123
,共null页
Thomas S. Mullaney(Author) Lang Lina(Translator)
Thomas S. Mullaney(Author) Lang Lina(Translator)
Thomas S. Mullaney(Author) Lang Lina(Translator)
民族国家 近代中国 历史 中国共产党 人口普查 理性 识别 勘探
民族國傢 近代中國 歷史 中國共產黨 人口普查 理性 識彆 勘探
민족국가 근대중국 역사 중국공산당 인구보사 이성 식별 감탐
minzu classification ; strategy ;muhinational country; national policy
The Chinese Communist Party ( CCP ) launched a nationwide census and voter registration campaign in the summer of 1953 .After debating which questions should be posed to their nearly six hundred million respondents , officials ultimately decided upon only five .The first four of these involved the most basic of demographic infor-mation, including name , age, gender , and rela-tionship to the head of one ' s household .The fifth one was settled upon a question:that of nationality or minzu.The outcome of the census proved shock-ing to Communist authorities and ultimately precip-itated the Ethnic Classification Project . Why the Communists wished to include minzu on the census schedule? The author argues that there were three reasons .The first reason is the deeply historical problem of maintaining the territo-rial integrity of a highly diverse empire .The sec-ond problem is more proximate , and originates in the ongoing rivalry between the Communists and the Nationalists during the first half of the twentieth century.Third, with regards to categorization , the advent of the Classification is attributable to a po-litical crisis prompted by the failure of the state ' s initial experiment with a highly noninterventionist policy of self-categorization . To understand each of these questions , the author brings the readers to explore the history of the term minzu itself, and suggests that the very in-clusion of minzu in the 1953-54 census schedule was itself the culmination of a complex history dat-ing back to the fall of the Qing dynasty ( 1644 -1911 ) and the formation of the first Chinese repub-lic.