Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7czq Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T05:03:51.030Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Pure and True: The Everyday Politics of Ethnicity for China’s Hui Muslims, by David R. Stroup, University of Washington Press, 2022, 268 pp., $105.00 (hardcover), ISBN 9780295749822, $32.00 (paperback) ISBN 9780295749839.

Review products

Pure and True: The Everyday Politics of Ethnicity for China’s Hui Muslims, by David R. Stroup, University of Washington Press, 2022, 268 pp., $105.00 (hardcover), ISBN 9780295749822, $32.00 (paperback) ISBN 9780295749839.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 August 2023

Susan McCarthy*
Affiliation:
Providence College [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Type
Book Review
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Association for the Study of Nationalities

David Stroup’s Pure and True is a political ethnography of the Hui, the largest of ten Muslim “minority nationalities” (shaoshu minzu) in the People’s Republic of China (PRC). The material in the book is drawn primarily from a year of field research Stroup conducted in 2015 and 2016 in four Chinese cities, two in the Han-dominated northeast (including Beijing) and two in western provinces where the Hui and Muslim presence is more pronounced. As a work of qualitative political science, Pure and True illuminates the political dimensions of ethno-religious identity in the PRC. Stroup is especially interested in the way official policies and discourses intersect with Hui self-understandings, practices, and intraethnic divisions. Despite his disciplinary background, he takes pains to avoid one of the occupational hazards that political scientists who study ethnic politics often face, the lure of cases involving overt contention and conflict. Stroup argues that too much attention to contentious politics can lead researchers to reify identities and overlook the effects of intragroup cleavages on “the conduct of ethnic politics” (7).

To evade this pitfall, Stroup trains his focus on the ways “daily practices reflect the fluid, contested nature of ethnic identity,” in an effort to understand “why, how, and when feelings of attachment to the group—or “groupness”—are most salient” for Hui Muslims (7). Pure and True investigates contestation, but that contestation mostly takes the form of debates and disagreements among the Hui regarding the meanings of “Huiness” in China’s overwhelmingly non-Muslim, secular society. The frictions Stroup analyzes are thus quite different from what is typically denoted by the phrase “contentious politics.” His emphasis on the “quiet politics” of ethnicity makes sense, given that the Hui are frequently (though not always) portrayed in official discourse as China’s “good Muslims,” more assimilated and less restive than the Uyghurs and other Muslim minorities.

Pure and True evokes the pioneering scholarship of the late Dru Gladney, who more than three decades ago argued that Hui ethnogenesis was an effect of PRC policies. In Gladney’s analysis, regime policies worked to engender and solidify a novel Hui ethnic identity among diverse communities of Sinophone Muslims. There is no question that Hui identity is informed by narratives of descent transmitted by Chinese Muslims about their historical and religious origins. Yet Hui recognize themselves as such in great part because the party-state has designated them as Hui and codified that identity on passports, residence permits, in dossiers, and so on. Hui identity is salient also because minzu identity is salient in China. Chinese people learn from a very young age that all citizens of the PRC are members of distinct “nationalities”; the very idea of minority (and majority) minzu is taken for granted.

Stroup builds on Gladney’s insights by demonstrating the continued influence of the party-state not just on what it means to “be” Hui but what it means to “do” Huiness. He does so in chapters analyzing practices related to relationships and family, diet, dress, language, and religious observance. Drawing on a wealth of interview and observational data, Stroup shows that there is considerable contestation among his subjects regarding these practices and their importance for Hui identity. He further argues that debates and disagreements reflect intra-Hui divisions of class, language, region, sect, and devotional intensity, all of which have been exacerbated by trends such as rural migration and urban redevelopment. The increasing salience of intra-Hui cleavages might seem contrary to the regime’s desire for nationalities unity, but Stroup argues that the “inward focus” of intra-Hui contestation “facilitates the CCP’s management of ethnic politics” insofar as it “limits contentious politics to intragroup discourse” (130).

Stroup keeps the focus on his cases, addressing theoretical debates and questions obliquely rather than head on. That said, the book is well grounded in theories of ethnicity, nationalism, and ethnic conflict. These include the work of Fredrik Barth, who emphasized the importance of boundaries and boundary maintenance to ethnic identity. Barth showed that ethnic boundaries could persist long after members of a group abandoned ostensibly essential cultural attributes and adopted the practices of other peoples among whom they lived. He also observed cases in which boundaries were dissolved and identities abandoned, usually when social conditions made it impossible for members of an ethnic group to fulfill cherished norms and expectations. In Pure and True Stroup reveals the anxiety and even shame experienced by some Hui due to failures to adhere to behavioral norms they view as essential markers of Hui identity. Yet none of his interviewees entertain the possibility of abandoning their Hui identity—and how could they, given its “official” character?

While Pure and True situates intra-Hui contestation against a backdrop of official policies, the Islamic dimensions of this contestation might have been more thoroughly addressed. The kinds of debates Stroup analyzes are (in my experience) rare or nonexistent among non-Muslim minorities in China. Islam may be a factor here. Scholars such as Talal Asad, Saba Mahmood, Nadia Fadil, and others have argued that Islam is not so much a creedal religion à la post-Reformation Christianity as a set of contested, heterogeneous and flexible practices and traditions. In other words, divergence and disagreement over the performance of everyday practices is an enduring and constitutive feature of Islam. It may be that among the Hui, the practice of contestation itself is shaped not just by government policies but by Muslim and Islamic traditions. If so, this highlights not the capacity of the Chinese regime but the limits of its ability to define and categorize those it governs.

Pure and True should interest scholars in many disciplines who research contemporary China, religion and ethnicity, and the politics of Islam in non-Muslim societies. Stroup writes in clear, accessible, jargon-free prose, making the book appropriate for undergraduate as well as graduate courses. His thoughtful research design and comparative ethnographic approach would also make Pure and True an excellent teaching tool in a course on qualitative methods. Stroup notes in an epilogue that he completed his field research just as Xi Jinping was launching a crackdown on a wide range of religious expression, especially among Chinese Muslims. This crackdown, the pandemic, and the broader political climate unfortunately make ethnographic research in the PRC difficult if not impossible to pursue, at least for the foreseeable future.