In recent years, China under Xi Jinping seems to have embraced a "second-generation ethnic policy," the latest iteration of a century+long effort to find a formula that can forge a nation-state out of the ashes of empire. 1/
Since the 1911 revolution that toppled the Manchu Qing Empire, Chinese statesmen no matter their political stripes have been near unanimous in claiming the territorial extent of the old empire as natural boundaries of the new nation. 1/
But they've disagreed on how to do so. After all, on what basis might people whose main connection had been that they were subjects of the same sovereign now agree to form a horizontal political community- a nation? 2/
To simplify, Republican leaders sought to blunt the danger diversity posed to the idea of the nation-state by arguing that the various peoples of China were unified through common decent: "5 races as 1 family" or as Chiang Kai-shek claimed, branches of a single tree. 3/
But, to paraphrase Joseph Esherick, these discourses had limited appeal b/c they weren't convincing or attractive to (many) non-Han communities. In fact, the 13th Dalai Lama of Tibet and 8th Jestundamba of Mongolia quickly declared themselves heads of new independent nations. 3/
Assailing the KMT's ethnic policies as exploitative and assimilationist, after 1949 the CCP made diversity explicit by dividing its population into what eventually would become 55 legally recognized minority groups (minzu) and the Han majority. As I argued in 🧵3 and my book...4/
the CCP insisted that its progressive policies of autonomy, equality, and socialist prosperity would repair damage done by past regimes to the multi-minzu nation and lead 'gradually, voluntarily, and organically' to 'patriotic unity.' 5/
Whether this was workable became moot when revolutionary impatience set in and relative moderation gave way to programs of coerced assimilation. A short-lived recommitment to pluralism in the 1980s sought to renew the promises made to 'minorities' in 1949. Too little, too late.6/
Following riots in Lhasa and the fall of the Soviet Union, the CCP tried winning 'minority' loyalty through economic development, raising living standards but also further disempowering local communities thru demographic change, control of capital+political resources, etc. 7/
Following an uprising in Tibet in 2008 (& the self-immolation of 160+ Tibetans after) and 2009 riots in Urumqi, advocates for a 2nd generation ethnic policy began to blame the ethnic framework upon which the PRC was founded, one that promised integration through the... 8/
recognition of difference, as the reason many non-Han have yet to embrace their identity as loyal Chinese citizens and could even lead to Soviet-style collapse. Building on this logic, XJP has called for forging a “communal consciousness” through “great ethnic fusion." 9/
Leading @jleibold to warn of a “new virulent form of cultural nationalism" that views minority identity as "an existential threat to the Party and the nation.” This helps explain the horrific state violence currently being committed in Xinjiang, 10/ tinyurl.com/ymkp9ayh
but also broader acts of repression against non-Han communities, such as the “sinification” of Hui Muslim mosques and the likely end of education in minority languages, all efforts to subjugate non-Han identity and complete the transition from empire to nation. 11/
-BW
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Tuesday: Sotades the Obscene, inventor of palindromes, the Priapeia, sotadean metre and so much more. Also: the kinaidoi (effeminate dancers of Alexandria), Arsinoe the sex-positive proto-feminist queen, incestual royal marriage and sick burns. 2/7 -ms
Wednesday: later antique Greek palindromes from the oldest letter-by-letter verse (a school exercise in Tebtunis Egypt) through the Greek Anthology, Leo the Wise, Western Euopean baptismal fonts and Theodoros Prodromos. 3/7 -ms
Day 6 of palindromic #TwitterHistorian @taoish Mark Saltveit's stint. Yesterday, the SATOR / ROTAS square. Today, "versus recurrentes" = Latin palindromic poetry, mostly 1 line. At #IMC2021, I argued that it was a continuous & self-referential genre from 2nd-15th c. CE.
1/12 -ms
I listed 42 but documenting is tricky. These were rarely in main texts. Most appeared in margins or on fly leaves, but repeated over the centuries. Theory: these were transmitted by teachers, esp. of scribes, and passed via wax tablets, memory & pen tests (federproben).
2/12 -ms
The classic (and first known) Latin verse #palindrome is a dactylic pentameter: "Roma tibi subito motibus ibit amor." Sidonius Apollinaris (ep. 9.14, ~480 CE) called it ancient. It's on a roof tile from Aquincum dated 107 CE next to a ROTAS square & at Ostia (200 CE). 3/12 -ms
Day 4 of #TweetHistorian Mark Saltveit @taoish's look at #palindromes. Thursday we viewed palindromic forms in non-European languages, a sadly neglected topic. "Today": the SATOR / ROTAS square, attested 4x in the first c. CE: 3x at Pompeii, 1x at Conimbriga in Portugal. 1/12 -ms
It's the Hollywood celebrity of #palindromes, thx to Chris Nolan's film TENET. It starts at an OPERA. ROTAS is the time reversal machine. TENET is the name of the conspiracy. Andrei SATOR is the villain. Thomas AREPO is an art forger we never see. 2/12 -ms beyondwordplay.com/palindromes-at…
This square is an image, a graphic composed of letters, arguably the world's first and most successful meme. Calling it a Latin sentence (SATOR AREPO TENET OPERA ROTAS, or the reverse) is a hypothesis with v. little historical support. AREPO is not a Latin word or name. 3/12 -ms
Let's try to tie this all together. Yesterday, we looked at how the spread of monotheism to South Arabia impacted its political sphere. Today, let's take a look at South Arabia during the early Islamic period.
~ik
Yesterday I mentioned how the Ethiopian Aksumites invaded South Arabia and installed a local Christian ruler. Around 530 AD, it was followed by that of the Ethiopian general ʾAbraha.
However, ʾAbraha made sure to follow in the footsteps of his Himyaritic predecessors.
~ik
For example, he claimed the Himyarite royal title, had reparations made at the Marib dam, and continued to leave inscriptions in the Sabaic language. He also continued to wage campaigns in Central Arabia; the inscription mentioned day 5 is actually one of his!
Yesterday, we looked at what the Amirite and Himyarite inscriptions tell us about the linguistic landscape of South Arabia in the late pre-Islamic period.
Now, let's look at the socio-political environment during the same period.
~ik
The 3rd century AD saw an intensification of relations between South Arabia and the Mediterranean/Levant. These statues depicting the Himyaritic rulers Ḏamarʿalī Yuhabirr and his son, Ṯaʾban are a fantastic example of this cultural exchange.
~ik
The statues show a coalescence of Hellenistic and South Arabian features: their nudity and the headbands typical ot former, the long hair and the moustache, ot the latter.
Also: the sculptors left their signature on the statues' knees, showing Hellenistic/SA collaboration.
Today, let's look more at the Himyarites and the language of their inscriptions. They reveal some more important clues about South Arabia's linguistic landscape during the late pre-Islamic period. ~ik
The Himyarites became the main political force in S-A around 300 AD. Around 280 AD, the Himyarite ruler Yāsir Yuhanʿim conquered the Sabaeans; his successor Šammar Yuharʿiš took parts of Ḥaḍramawt. By the early 4th century all of Ḥaḍramawt had been conquered ~ik
The Himyarites' success is reflected in the language of the inscriptions. From the 4th to the 6th centuries, all the S-A inscriptions are written in what we call Late Sabaic.
The differences are both linguistic and paleographic. ~ik