Skip to main content

Familiar Strangers: Acknowledgments

Familiar Strangers
Acknowledgments
    • Notifications
    • Privacy
  • Project HomeFamiliar Strangers
  • Projects
  • Learn more about Manifold

Notes

Show the following:

  • Annotations
  • Resources
Search within:

Adjust appearance:

  • font
    Font style
  • color scheme
  • Margins
table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Title
  3. Copyright
  4. Dedication
  5. Contents
  6. List of Maps
  7. List of Illustrations
  8. Acknowledgments
  9. Preface
  10. Introduction: Purposes and Form of a Muslim History in China
  11. 1 / The Frontier Ground and Peoples of Northwest China
  12. 2 / Acculturation and Accommodation: China’s Muslims to the Seventeenth Century
  13. 3 / Connections: Muslims in the Early Qing, 1644–1781
  14. 4 / Strategies of Resistance: Integration by Violence
  15. 5 / Strategies of Integration: Muslims in New China
  16. 6 / Conclusion: Familiar Strangers
  17. Chinese Character Glossary
  18. Bibliography
  19. Index

Acknowledgments

For financial support: The Danforth Foundation, Mount Holyoke College, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Boston-Hangzhou Summer Study-Travel Program, Dr. Isadore Rodis, the Jackson School for International Studies of the University of Washington, the Associated Kyoto Program.

For scholarly resources: The directors and staffs of the East Asian Collection of the Hoover Institution (Stanford University), the Library of Congress, the Toyo Bunko (Tokyo), the National Diet Library (Tokyo), the Kyoto University Library, the Hangzhou University Library, the Harvard-Yenching Library, the John K. Fairbank Center for Research in East Asian Studies, the Yale University Library, the University of Washington East Asia Collection. Phil Mobley produced the maps from my inchoate lists of place names. Raymond Lum of the Harvard-Yenching Library helped me search for and produced the photographs from old positives and negatives, which were painstakingly collected and organized by Mary Ellen Alonso.

For instruction and guidance: Hajjī Yusuf Chang, Albert Dien, the late Joseph Fletcher, Nancy Gallagher, the late Iwamura Shinobu, Hal Kahn, Ma Qicheng, Ma Shouqian, Ma Tong, Nakada Yoshinobu, the late Rev. Claude Pickens, Morris Rossabi, Saguchi Toru, Sung Li-hsing, Lyman van Slyke, Ezra Vogel, James Wrenn, and Yang Huaizhong.

For critical readings: Françoise Aubin, Peter Bryder, Leila Chebbi Cherif, Daniel Gardner, Dru Gladney, Sohail Hashmi, Kavita Khory, Donald Leslie, Jim Millward, and Wang Jianping read parts of the manuscript and saved me from many errors. Pamela Crossley generously opened her reader’s comments to discussion and helped me to refine my sense of our field and its issues. Stevan Harrell listened to the book as it developed and shared his knowledge of Chinese society and gift for prose style. Gao Zhanfu patiently guided a non-Chinese non-Muslim through the world of Hui scholarship.

For collegiality and discussion: Jere Bacharach, Linda Benson, Ming Chan, Helen Chauncey, Chen Yung-fa, Dr. and Mrs. Huan-ming Chu, Jim Cole, Juan and Liz Davila, Jerry Dennerline, the late Jack Dull, Jamal Elias, Joseph Esherick, Jay Fiegenbaum, Maris Gillette, Kent Guy, Kate Hartford, Raphael Israeli, Mohammed Jiyad, Kay Ann Johnson, Kim Ho-dong, Terry Lautz, Janis Levy, Beatrice Manz, Kathy Masalski, Bob Merkin, Dick Minear, Emiko Moffitt, Barbara Pillsbury, Mary Rankin, Justin Rudelson, Vera Schwarcz, Marilyn Sides, Miriam Silverberg, John Voll, Dennis Yasutomo, Elsie Young, and Aaron Zysow. Laurie Pollack ensured that my superannuated computer would not eat the manuscript, and Tom and the Computing Group in the basement performed some amazing transformations. Arienne Dwyer, All Igmen, Bill Clark, and the other graduate students at the University of Washington enlivened my days with talk and kept me working late nights.

Colleagues at Mount Holyoke College: All the members of the History Department past and present, Dan Brown, Lee Bowie and Meredith Michaels, Joan Ericson, Vinnie Ferraro, Samba and Fatoumata Gadjigo, John Garofano, Penny Gill, Stephen Jones, Girma Kebbede, Indira Peterson, Tadanori Yamashita, Katy and Ted Yao. At the Academic Computing Center, Vijay Kumar, Paul Dobosh, Teena Johnson-Smith, Cindy Legare, Sue Rusiecki, Ivy Tillman, and Jürgen Botz have kept me (barely) afloat on the cybersea. Holly Sharac was always there with an encouraging word, a tactful remonstration, and omnicompetence.

For publication of the book: The sure editorial hand of Lorri Hagman and the supervisorial presence of Naomi Pascal, both of the University of Washington Press,

And closest to home, the family that has put up with this project longer than anyone should ever have to live with a doctoral dissertation. Esther and Eugene Lipman helped me through every year of the lengthy preparation and research, never wavering in their support or love. Avi and Mia Lipman have spent their entire lives with the Sino-Muslims; I thank them and love them for their patience and, as my father wrote of my brothers and me so long ago, for their blessed distractions. Catherine Allgor has been an intellectual companion, an unrelenting critic, and a loving friend on the ten-page days and the ten-word days. To all of them I dedicate the work to which they have contributed so much.

It is said that a Muslim rug-maker always includes at least one error in every carpet, for only God can achieve perfection. Would that I had both the competence and the chutzpah to think that I could choose what would be wrong in this book. Its value surely comes from those who have written before and who have helped me write, and all of its errors must as surely be my own.

Annotate

Next Chapter
Preface
PreviousNext
All Rights Reserved
Powered by Manifold Scholarship. Learn more at
Opens in new tab or windowmanifoldapp.org