China’s official narratives on Xinjiang : interethnic mingling, economic prosperity and religious terrorism

Abstract

The northwest region of Xinjiang in the People’s Republic of China has drawn international attention recently because of state-perpetrated violence towards its non-Han population. This paper examines how Chinese authorities construct their narratives about the Xinjiang issue and justify their actions in the region. The analysis will focus on official white papers published by the State’s Council Information Office. Through the investigation of the documents, three main narratives on Xinjiang will be presented, together with the way in which they have developed over the past decades. Each will be then situated within the larger transformation of Chinese politics and political discourse in recent years, especially since General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party Xi Jinping has taken office. Instead of considering Beijing’s narratives on Xinjiang as an exception, this essay maintains that their underlying paradigms comply with Chinese governmental strategy as a whole, although the repression in Xinjiang represents their extreme consequences

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