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    Dr. Eric Schluessel. (1970, January 1). Lesson Plan: The Contested Archive. Teaching Materials, Xinjiang Documentation Project Archive, Arts Digital Collections, University of British Columbia, Vancouver. https://n2t.net/ark:/76271/23/1719 Dr. Eric Schluessel. Lesson Plan: The Contested Archive. Teaching Materials, Xinjiang Documentation Project Archive, Arts Digital Collections, University of British Columbia, Vancouver. January 1, 1970. https://n2t.net/ark:/76271/23/1719 Dr. Eric Schluessel. Lesson Plan: The Contested Archive. Teaching Materials, Xinjiang Documentation Project Archive, Arts Digital Collections, University of British Columbia, Vancouver. 1 Jan. 1970. n2t.net/ark:/76271/23/1719
  • Title: Lesson Plan: The Contested Archive
  • Description: In conjunction with the Xinjiang Victims Database, students will analyze primary sources to develop their own understanding of the situation based the evidence at hand. This is a “history of the present” exercise in which students will spend a class period conducting simulated research in a “Xinjiang archive.” They will begin with a simple question—“What is happening in Xinjiang?”—and come to their own conclusions through a guided activity. Prof. Schluessel’s research focuses on the social and economic history of Xinjiang. He has published a monograph on the Qing empire’s efforts to transform Xinjiang into a culturally Chinese territory, Land of Strangers: The Civilizing Project in Qing Central Asia, as well as articles on the region’s experiences with local government and the law.
  • Creator: Dr. Eric Schluessel
  • Contributor: Dr. Eric Schluessel
  • Publisher: Xinjiang Documentation Project
  • Language: English
  • Format: PDF
  • Source: Contributed by Eric Schluessel, Assistant Professor of History at George Washington University
  • Subject: Lesson Plan
  • Keywords: interment camps | lesson plan | re-education camps | teaching materials
  • Item Type: Document
  • Collection: Teaching Materials
    • Additional Details
    • Description: In conjunction with the Xinjiang Victims Database, students will analyze primary sources to develop their own understanding of the situation based the evidence at hand. This is a “history of the present” exercise in which students will spend a class period conducting simulated research in a “Xinjiang archive.” They will begin with a simple question—“What is happening in Xinjiang?”—and come to their own conclusions through a guided activity. Prof. Schluessel’s research focuses on the social and economic history of Xinjiang. He has published a monograph on the Qing empire’s efforts to transform Xinjiang into a culturally Chinese territory, Land of Strangers: The Civilizing Project in Qing Central Asia, as well as articles on the region’s experiences with local government and the law.