London - New York: Routledge Curzon is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, 2004. — xviii; 277 p.; illustr. — ISBN 0–415–31413–5; ISBN 0-203-49859-3; ISBN 0-203-33750-6.
The first comprehensive study of the Puyuma people of Taiwan, this book is based on extensive field research over a period of twenty years. The Puyuma are an Austronesian people, who today number less than (37000). In Taiwan, they are the least known of the aboriginal groups, numbering only 6000, and inhabiting the Southeastern province of Taitung. The Puyuma are today settled farmers, but until the twentieth century they subsisted on horticulture and hunting. The village that forms the focus of this study is called Puyuma (or Nanwang for the Taiwanese administration), whose inhabitants number(1300). The study looks at the historical changes in the status and definition of these people in relation to the central state, the criteria by which people determine their own ethnic identity and the evolution of that identity through history. The increasing awareness in the West of the importance of ethnic relations makes this an especially timely book.