The vast majority (>90%) of Chinese are Han Chinese. The remainder are distributed among
55 other ethnic groups. This diversity was awkwardly displayed during the opening ceremonies of the last Olympic games, when a parade of 56 children representing those groups was later revealed to have been comprised of 56 Han Chinese children wearing the ethnic clothing of the other groups.
Now there is a photoessay which appears to correct that gaffe. All of the ethnic groups are portrayed in professionally composed group portraits, with the subjects wearing traditional dress and often carrying traditional instruments or tools. Pictured above as an example are the ethnic Kazak; the others are at the link. It's an impressive photo gallery.
Link.
(Being from the US I often find myself mulling over the fate the variety of Native American cultures has suffered as well and what path they might have taken in their own time.)
Also, a majority of these tribes influenced Han Chinese and Southeast Asian cultures, especially Manchurian and the Yunnan tribes. So this is rather refreshing to look at, and as a Han Chinese I'm grateful to have met some of these tribes back in China.
Aww! Upper-middle-class white guilt!
Your culture can be so adorable sometimes.
Cultures do not bloom in isolation. Every hot pepper found in all of Asia had its roots in Mexico, and was brought over by the Spanish and Portuguese. Every tomato in Italy has roots in North America. My culture has gained much from the west - a sense of openness, individualism, and respect for human rights.
I'm sure you hate this though. You'd rather take us and throw us in little static exhibits in the zoo, so you can coo over us "authentic" minorities.
And just in case you didn't know, that already happened in China 300 hundred years ago. The ruling ethnic group was Manchurian, not Han. And then there were Mongols a longer time ago. And then Han Chinese were a combination of many groups and separate kingdoms even longer time ago.
I know, it's hard not to feel guilty about how American culture pretty much consumed the whole world by now.
Not all are ethnically "Chinese though." Clearly the Russians, Uzbeks, Koreans, etc are representative of immigrant groups which are prevalent in China.
Very cool though!
So there are many groups that continue to fight for recognition but are bunched in with other groups that they do not share dialect or other forms of culture with..
No one has the corner on oppression though. We can all be oppressors or those oppressed. For example people forget that before being a Buddhist nation, Tibet was a culture of warlords that devastated other nations. I agree with secret asian guy, guilt is an easy emotion that feeds our inflated sense of our own importance in the world.