Joseph C. Miller Memorial Lecture by Pamela Crossley
The vogue for "ethnicity" in many fields of historical study has reified a concept for which there is little direct evidence in the historical record before the twentieth century. The original meanings of "ethnicity" and the terms derived from it encompassed political and social dynamics that have been obscured in many contemporary uses of "ethnicity" in the social sciences. More importantly, the historical phenomena hidden behind ethnicity discourses in historiography appear to be connected to forms of dependency and the affiliation of individuals with them. Using examples mainly but not exclusively from Chinese history, this talk traces the growth of ascriptive power of states from the medieval to modern periods, suggesting that the derivative and synthetic aspects of "ethnicity" discourses might reveal the power and state issues that have generated them.
Time
Monday, 13.12.21 - 04:15 PM
- 06:00 PM
Event format
Lecture series
Topic
"Dependency and the Mirage of "'Ethnicity'"
Target groups
Students
Researchers
Languages
English
Location
Online via Zoom
Reservation
not required
Additional Information
Organizer
BCDSS
Contact