Muslim Women at a Crossroads: Gender and Development in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region
Author: Cindy Yung-Leh Huang
A dissertation submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Anthropology, University of California, Berkeley, Fall 2009.
Source: UC Berkeley Electronic Theses and Dissertations
ABSTRACT
This dissertation is an ethnographic study of the Muslim Uyghur ethnic minority in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region in northwestern China. I explore how the narratives of the women I study reflect historical conditions, as well as shape their political, ethical and cultural engagement in the present. In dozens of interviews and over a year of participant observation, a persistent theme emerged: being one who is japakesh, one who perseveres through difficulty and suffers with a moral purpose. Given the shifting demands of an environment marked by rapid change and development, being japakesh entails different sacrifices and challenges for each generation. Even as the women share a concern with how to live a good life as a Muslim Uyghur woman in Xinjiang today, this project takes on a form and character particular to their historical experiences. In weaving together the gendered stories of those who came of age during different periods of China’s development (socialist, reform and post-reform), I illuminate the contours and ambivalences of generational narratives, in particular vis-a-vis the rising dominance of ‘middle class’ dreams. The stories that women shared with me, and that I contextualize and retell in this
dissertation, convey a sense of how life is conceived of, and therefore how life is lived, in contemporary Xinjiang.