Type | Journal Article - Ethnicity and ethnic groups in China |
Title | Ethnicity and Kin Terms among Two Kinds of Yi |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 1989 |
Page numbers | 179-197 |
URL | http://www.alebo.se/china/docs/2 kinds of yi people.pdf |
Abstract | There are, according to the 1982 census, over 5,400,000 Yi people in China (Chen Shilin et.al. 1985:1). The story says that the term Yi ($£) was coined by Mao Zedong in the 1950s as a designation for a category of people formerly referred to by a large number of names, the most common of which were the generic Luoluo (4${ii) or the even broader term Yi (j^l), which means simply "barbarians." The Chairman, both ideologically correct as a Communist and grateful for the help some of these people had rendered to the Communist Party at the time of the Long March, replaced this old, pejorative Yi with a homophonous term bearing a better meaning - a tripod or fine cooking pot1 . When the people of China were classified into 55 minzu in the late 1950s, this newer, nicer Yi was applied to a large number of diverse people living primarily in the provinces of Yunnan, Sichuan, and Guizhou, and in small numbers in Guangxi (GuojiaMinwei 1981:297) |
» | China - National Population Census 1982 |