The Uyghur people and lands have become particularly prominent in the news in recent years. To help us develop a more nuanced and accurately-informed understanding, I thought I would compile a Uyghur-related book list. I have included the author(s)’s public profiles, publication dates and the publisher’s blurb with each book. Since I have not read these books and this is quite a long list, I hope this information will help you to decide which books you might be more interested in. I have also included a few online sources of information related to the CCP’s assault on the Uyghur people at the end of the page.

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A Brief Introduction

Uyghur mosqueThe Uyghurs (ئۇيغۇر) are a Muslim, Turkic people found predominantly in the most easterly part of Central Asia. They are a traditionally sedentary (settled, not nomadic) and agrarian society, historically organised around oasis cities. One of the most well-known cities, Kashgar (قەشقەر), was a significant stop on the Silk Road, among others, and an important centre for Islamic scholarship and teaching. There are also small populations of Kazakh and other groups based in this region. They are often grouped together with Uyghurs as they are also largely Turkic and Muslim and are also targeted by the CCP, so some of the books mentioned below may also be referring to them. There are now large Uyghur populations in Kazakhstan, Turkey and Kyrgyzstan, as well as smaller populations elsewhere. Finally, it is important to be aware that the Uyghurs are not an ethnic minority, as they are often called, but the majority in their land.

I’m conscious that the vast majority of reporting on Uyghurs now positions them as an oppressed victim, and while they are undoubtedly being oppressed, this surely should not be what defines them. However, it is very difficult to find books in English that are not somehow related to their current relationship with China and their oppression. I have included what I can find, but more suggestions for this would be great.

If you have any book recommendations, please get in touch.

Organisation of the List

I have organised this list into some general categories which you can navigate to directly using the contents list below. I have also loosely ordered them so that the more academic books are at the end of the sections. This is because these books are usually quite expensive and sometimes require more commitment to read, making them a little less generally accessible.

Notes

  1. Since I have not yet read these books and am not an expert on the topic, this is not a list of recommendations but more of a starting point. I have tried not to let my personal opinions or interests influence the list with the hope that it will offer a wider range of voices. The list is of course not exhaustive. As always, I advise reading critically and widely.
  2. A lot of these books are written by non-Uyghur researchers and writers. While their ethnicity does not invalidate their knowledge of their subject area, it would have been nice to have more Uyghur writers on the list. If you have suggestions, let me know.
  3. The blurbs included with each book are not my words and are the property of the publisher (and the word choices of the publisher).

Doppa - Uyghur hat

Contents

Non-Fiction

Fiction

Poetry

Other resources for Uyghur literature and culture

Resources for more information on the assault on the Uyghurs


Non-Fiction

History and Society

Uyghurs and Uyghur Identity (link – free PDF)

by Dolkun Kamberi – pub. 2015


Ancient Heritage of Täklimakan: Uyghur Urbiculture (link – free PDF)

by Dr. Dolkun Kamberi – pub. 2016


Eurasian Crossroads: A History of Xinjiang (link)

by James Millward (@JimMillward) – pub. 2021 (2nd ed.)


Crossing the Sands of Time: An Examination of the History and Legends of the Great Uighur Empire (link)

by James E. Churchward (Facebook page) – pub. 2019


Treasures of the Great Silk Road (link)

by Edgar Knobloch (Wikipedia entry) – pub. 2012


The Arts and Crafts of Turkestan (link)

by Johannes Kalter – pub. 1984


Academic Books

Central Asia: A New History from the Imperial Conquests to the Present (link)

by Adeeb Khalid (Academia page) – pub. 2021


The Uyghur Community: Diaspora, Identity and Geopolitics (link)


Uyghur Nation: Reform and Revolution on the Russia-China Frontier (link)

by David Brophy (@Dave_Brophy) – pub. 2016


Soundscapes of Uyghur Islam (link)

by Rachel Harris (@Rachel_A_Harris) – pub. 2020


The Sacred Routes of Uyghur History (link)

by Rian Thum (@RianThum) – pub. 2014


Struggle by the Pen: The Uyghur Discourse of Nation and National Interest, c.1900-1949 (link)

by Ondřej Klimeš – pub. 2015


Borderland Capitalism: Turkestan Produce, Qing Silver and the Birth of an Eastern Market (link)

by Kwangmin Kim – pub. 2016


Language, Education and Uyghur Identity in Urban Xinjiang (link)

Edited by Joanne Smith Finley (professional profile) and Xiaowei Zang (academic profile) – pub. 2015


Situating the Uyghurs Between China and Central Asia (link)

Edited by Ildikó Bellér-Hann, M. Cristina Cesàro and Joanne Smith Finley (professional profile) – pub. 2018


Inside Xinjiang: Space, Place and Power in China’s Muslim Far Northwest (link)

Edited by Anna Hayes (professional profile) and Michael Clarke (professional profile)



(Auto)biography and Memoir

How I Survived a Chinese Re-education Camp: A Uyghur Woman’s Story (link)

by Gulbahar Haitiwaji and Rozenn Morgat (@rozennmgt), translated by Edward Gauvin (website) – pub. 2022

Also available in the original French (2021): Rescapée du goulag chinois: Premier témoignage d’une survivante ouïghoure


What has happened to me: A testimony of a Uyghur woman – web manga (link)

by Shimizu Tomomi (@swim_shu) – pub. 2019

Shimizu Tomomi has also written another manga about the Chinese camps called その國の名を誰も言わない (No One Says the Name of that Country), which is only available in Japanese here.


The Land Drenched in Tears (link)

by Söyüngül Chanisheff, translated by Rahima Mahmut (@MahmutRahima) – pub. 2018


Jewher Ilham: A Uyghur’s Fight to Free Her Father (link)


Dragon Fighter: One Woman’s Epic Struggle For Peace With China (link)

by Rebiya Kadeer (@KadeerRebiya) and Alexandra Cavelius – pub. 2009


The Chief Witness (link)

by Sayragul Sauytbay and Alexandra Cavelius (@CaveliusAlex), translated from German by Caroline Waight – pub. 2021

Also available in the original German: Die Kronzeugin.


No Escape: A Uyghur’s Story of Oppression, Genocide, and China’s Digital Dictatorship (link)

by Nury Turkel (@nuryturkel) – pub. 2022


We Uyghurs Have No Say: An Imprisoned Writer Speaks (link)

by Ilham Tohti (currently imprisoned with life sentence), translated by Yaxue Cao, Cindy Carter, and Matthew Robertson – pub. 2022



Uyghurs and the CCP

Menace: China’s Colonization of the Islamic World & Uyghur Genocide (link)

by Abdul Hakim Idris (@AHakimIdris) – pub. 2021

Also available in Turkish:


The War on the Uyghurs: China’s Campaign Against Xinjiang’s Muslims (link)

by Sean R. Roberts (@robertsreport) – pub. 2020


The Slaughter: Mass Killings, Organ Harvesting, and China’s Secret Solution to Its Dissident Problem (link)

by Ethan Gutmann (@Eastofethan) – pub. 2014


The Tree That Bleeds: A Uighur Town on the Edge (link)

by Nick Holdstock (@NickHoldstock) – pub. 2013


Worse than Death: Reflections on the Uyghur Genocide (link)

by Mamtimin Ali (@MamtiminAla) – pub. 2021


Academic

Land of Strangers: The Civilizing Project in Qing Central Asia (link)

by Eric Schluessel (@erictschluessel) – pub. 2020


Xinjiang and China’s Rise in Central Asia – A History (link)

by Michael E. Clarke (@meclarke114) – pub. 2011


Xinjiang in the Twenty-First Century: Islam, Ethnicity and Resistance (link)

by Michael Dillon – pub. 2018


Xinjiang and the Expansion of Chinese Communist Power: Kashgar in the Early Twentieth Century (link)

by Michael Dillon – pub. 2017


In The Camps: China’s High-Tech Penal Colony (link)

by Darren Byler (@dtbyler) – pub. 2021


laghman - doppa - Uyghur mosque


Fiction

Novels

Nights of Turkistan (link)

by Najeeb Elkilany – pub. 2012


Factory Girl (link)

by Josanne La Valley – pub. 2017


The Vine Basket (link)

by Josanne La Valley – pub. 2013


The Backstreets (link)

by Persat Tursun (currently imprisoned), translated from Uyghur by Darren Byler (@dtbyler) and Anonymous (disappeared, assumed imprisoned) – pub. 2022

Note: This writer’s earlier work, The Art of Suicide, received considerable criticism for anti-Islamic content. I haven’t read it so I can’t comment on this.


Confessions of a Jade Lord (link)

by Alat Asem, translated from Mandarin by Bruce Humes (@bruce_humes) and Jun Liu – pub. 2018


Bloodline (link)

by Patigül – pub. 2019


Short Stories

Festival for the Pigs (link)

by Memtimin Hoshur (disappeared, assumed imprisoned), translated by Darren Byler (@dtbyler) and Mutellip Enwer

A short story available to read on Guernica magazine’s website.


Caged: The Writings of Nurmuhemmet Yasin (link)

by Nurmuhemmet Yasin (imprisoned shortly after publishing this short story, reportedly died in prison in 2011) – pub. 2005

This is available for free from Radio Free Asia as a PDF.


Poetry

Drops of Melodies – Uyghur Poetry (link)

by Hemirah Tohti, translated by Tahir Burhan and Madeleine Burhan – pub. 2019


Uyghur poetry focus in Modern Poetry in Translation 2021, Issue 1 (link)

A curated selection of Uyghur poetry including an introduction to Uyghur poetry, which is available to read free here.


Uyghur Poetry Reader (link)

by Nicholas Kontovas (@KontovasNiko) and Gulnisa Nazarova (professional profile) – pub. 2011

A collection of poetry in Uyghur and English translation aimed at Uyghur language students.


Joshua Freeman – Uyghur->English translator

Joshua Freeman is very active in Uyghur to English poetry translation and has translated a lot of the Uyghur poetry in English that appears online.


Tahir Hamut

Merdan Ehet’eli

Common Night – Asymptote


Other resources for Uyghur literature and culture

Resources for more information on the assault on the Uyghurs