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Uprisings, Migrations, and Ethnic Identity: A Study of the Kaxabu in the Taiwan Borderland during the Qing

Uprisings, Migrations, and Ethnic Identity: A Study of the Kaxabu in the Taiwan Borderland during the Qing
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摘要 The earliest written record of the term “Kaxabu” dates to the 1908 survey report by the Japanese scholar Ino Kanori. In his study of the Pazzehe tribe in central Taiwan, he wrote: “Kaxabu was the name given by the Pazzehe to Daiyao'puru, a small division of its ethnic group.” During the Qing era, the Pazzehe was called the Anli group by Chinese speakers in Taiwan, while the Kaxabu were named Puzili she (the Puzili tribe). Since the Kaxabu originated from the Pazzehe, thus in determining the time when the Kaxabu became distinct from the Pazzehe and in exploring the differences between them, we will also elucidate historical developments before the Japanese colonial era. Using Qing historical materials such as travelogues, expedition-records, newspapers, data from fieldwork, surveys, and interviews, this study traces the intervention of the Qing court into tribal relationships in central Taiwan, beginning with the Dajiaxi she Incident (1731-32), it touches on the changing environment of the Kaxabu/ Puzili she in their migrations in order to shed light on the development of the two distinctive identities-the Kaxabu and Pazzehe/Anli group. The analysis also reveals the impact of uprisings and migrations upon the border area surrounding Qing Taiwan, as well as problems of ethnic identification and geography. The earliest written record of the term “Kaxabu” dates to the 1908 survey report by the Japanese scholar Ino Kanori. In his study of the Pazzehe tribe in central Taiwan, he wrote: “Kaxabu was the name given by the Pazzehe to Daiyao'puru, a small division of its ethnic group.” During the Qing era, the Pazzehe was called the Anli group by Chinese speakers in Taiwan, while the Kaxabu were named Puzili she (the Puzili tribe). Since the Kaxabu originated from the Pazzehe, thus in determining the time when the Kaxabu became distinct from the Pazzehe and in exploring the differences between them, we will also elucidate historical developments before the Japanese colonial era. Using Qing historical materials such as travelogues, expedition-records, newspapers, data from fieldwork, surveys, and interviews, this study traces the intervention of the Qing court into tribal relationships in central Taiwan, beginning with the Dajiaxi she Incident (1731-32), it touches on the changing environment of the Kaxabu/ Puzili she in their migrations in order to shed light on the development of the two distinctive identities-the Kaxabu and Pazzehe/Anli group. The analysis also reveals the impact of uprisings and migrations upon the border area surrounding Qing Taiwan, as well as problems of ethnic identification and geography.
作者 Li-wan Hung
出处 《Frontiers of History in China》 2014年第3期409-448,共40页 中国历史学前沿(英文版)
关键词 STATECRAFT ethnic identity shufan Kaxabu Puzili she migration FRONTIER BORDER statecraft, ethnic identity, shufan, Kaxabu, Puzili she, migration, frontier, border
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  • 1Currently in Taiwan, there are 16 officially recognized indigenous tribes, and the Pazzehe are not among them.
  • 2According to an interview with Ai-lian Xiao, chief executive of the Kaxabu Culture and Education Association conducted on December 31, 2011, it was during a cultural revival activity in 1999 that the pastor of the Memorial Camping Ground of Xie wei, Guan-yi Lai, mentioned the historical origin of the Pazzehe, which was different from the previously known conception of the Kaxabu.
  • 3Much has been written on the long and complicated history of the emergence of the "Hans" in Taiwan. The definition of Taiwan Hans that is used in the historical annals of the Qing, for example, in the Taiwanfu zhi which was the eariest gazetter published in Qing Taiwan; there the word denotes natives in Taiwan including shengfan, shufan and huafan. The gazetters identified Han villages with the Zhuang and aborigines with she (meaning in some sense "a culturally distinct social group," but also a regional community with kinship ties, a unit for tax collection, and other defining conditions). See Taiwanfu zhi written by Jiang Yu-ying and annotated by Cheng Bi-sheng; Hung Li-wan, Shufan shehui wangluo yu jiti yishi: Taiwan zhongbu Pingpu zuqun lishi bianqian (1700-1900), 41-89.
  • 4Hung Li-wan, "Cong Qingdai she zhi duochong xingzhi kan Pingpu shequn guanxi fazhan," 1-41.
  • 5In the early part of the Japanese colonial era, many scholars from Japan, working under the colonial government, surveyed the social culture of both Hans and non-Hans in Taiwan. However, the real motive behind such research was the political administration and development of material resources. Hence, such surveys became a political-economic tool of colonial governance. In5 Kanori was an example of such a scholar.
  • 6In Kanori, "Taiwan Pingpu no fan no yizhizu Pazzehe no jiusu ji sixiang no yiban," 89.
  • 7Utsurikawa Nenozo, "Chengguan pudi heyue zi tong guan-puli no shufan juluo (2)," 43.
  • 8The Kaxabu migrated to territories beyond the reach of Qing administration, and they interacted with mountain people (raw aborigines) including the Wanda group, Meiyuan group, and Wushe group (the present-day Taiya tribes far removed from the political economy of the basins and plains).
  • 9The Puzili she mainly hunted, gathered and engaged in commerce with the Wuao shisan she, which belonged to the mountain people of Nanshi group of Taiya tribes, while the Anli she mainly farmed.
  • 10See Hung Li-wan, Shufan shehui wangluoyujitiyishi. lo Zhan Su-juan, "Quanshi yu jiangou zhijian: dangdai 'Pingpu xianxiang'de jiedu," 45-78.

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