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White tigers and azure dragons: Overseas Chinese burial practices in the Canadian and American west (1850s to 1910s)

Resource type
Thesis type
(Thesis) M.A.
Date created
2005
Authors/Contributors
Abstract
This thesis explores the archaeological signature at overseas Chinese burial grounds in ithe Canadian and American west. The primary objective is to trace Chinese death ritual practices from early Chinese dynasties through to the main diaspora from China in the late Qing Dynasty. It also examines the main influences in their new home that led to the adoption of new practices and eventual redefinition of traditional rites. A second objective was to examine material culture and landscape modifications visible at Wild Horse Creek Chinese Burial Ground in British Columbia. Patterns of distribution were established to determine the types of rituals practiced during its use. These patterns were compared to sites surveyed in contemporaneous Chinese burial grounds in British Columbia and the South. Pacific. Research indicated that Chinese were maintaining internal traditional rites associated with placation of ancestors and adopted local symbols and cemetery styles for presentation to non Chinese communities.
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Copyright is held by the author.
Scholarly level
Language
English
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etd2091_A.pdf 12.28 MB

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