Uprisings,Migrations, and Ethnic Identity: A Study of the Kaxabu in the Taiwan Borderland during the Qing |
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作者姓名: | Li-wan Hung |
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基金项目: | Acknowledgements The related research was supported by the National Science Council of Taiwan under grants NSC101-2410-H-001-077-MY2. This paper has been presented at the International Workshop on “Defining the Jecen: The Revolution of Qing Frontier, 1644-1912,” organized by Hong Kong University and Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong; May 26-27, 2012. The author would like to thank the valuable suggestions and comments from the participants of the Workshop and the two reviewers of this manuscript as well as the precious information provided by Mr. Ying-yu Pan, Ms Ai-lian Xaio and other villagers in the field interviews from Spring of 2010 to 2012. The author also thanks the assistance of Dr. Loretta Eumie Kim for polishing the manuscript, Mr. Yin-yi Cheng and Mr. Meng-hsun Li for collecting the data and preparing the maps. |
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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.
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关 键 词: | 台湾地区 迁移 族群 清代 日本学者 文字记载 调查报告 问卷调查 |
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