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      THE UYGHURS FROM MODULAR COMMUNITY TO PARTISAN NATION

      Journal of Chinese History
      Cambridge University Press (CUP)

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          Abstract

          The study of ethnicity has long been shaped by a conflict between two broad positions, one of which may be called the circumstantialist or instrumentalist position, and the other the primordialist or affectivist position. The primordialists view ethnic sentiments as something existing prior to and not dependent on goal-oriented behavior and hence not subject to calculation. The circumstantialists, however, view ethnicity as a product of particular circumstances in which contingent groups, usually at the behest of elites within those groups, broaden and reconceptualize their particular group interests as being derived from a common primordial substance, thus generating ethnicity. These circumstantialist or instrumentalist arguments as a rule assume that the particular circumstances where such group redefinitions and extensions prove useful are either unique to, or at least much more common in, the modern age. Thus the circumstantialist approach usually implies a modernist one.

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          Most cited references5

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          Primordial, Personal, Sacred and Civil Ties: Some Particular Observations on the Relationships of Sociological Research and Theory

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            The poverty of primordialism: The demystification of ethnic attachments

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              Debate: The verdict of history: The inexpungeable tie of primordiality ‐ a response to Eller and Coughlan

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                applab
                Journal of Chinese History
                J Chin Hist
                Cambridge University Press (CUP)
                2059-1632
                2059-1640
                July 2017
                April 19 2017
                July 2017
                : 1
                : 02
                : 353-363
                Article
                10.1017/jch.2016.37
                db996ed8-bd5a-4131-ab4b-dd479266a1cd
                © 2017
                History

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