Changes with Chinese Characteristics: Rural Clan Culture, Clan Communities, and Kinship Relations During Urbanization
This research examines urbanization and its impact on rural clan culture and clan communities, emphasizing normative changes with regard to clan sentiment, family values, filial piety, ancestor worship, decent relations, gender relations, marital relation
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Changes with Chinese Characteristics: Rural Clan Culture, Clan Communities, and Kinship Relations During Urbanization Zongli Tang
Abstract This research examines urbanization and its impact on rural clan culture and clan communities, emphasizing normative changes with regard to clan sentiment, family values, filial piety, ancestor worship, decent relations, gender relations, marital relations, patriarchal power, and rituals, which have been long neglected by pioneer studies. As revealed, urbanization has weakened traditional influence among villagers especially the well-educated youths. But the impact is limited in scope and intensity. Migrant workers are still in their rural roots. The current urban development is not sufficient to completely separate them physically and mentally from native clan communities. Traditional culture remains not only in their memory but also in their daily life. China’s urbanization is distinguished from European model thanks to changed technological environment today. New technical conditions in transportation and information make the distance between migrant workers and their villages relatively shorter. Migrant workers’ spiritual communication with their family members, relatives, and local clans is not loosened. Their various links with home-villages do not cut off, but continue to be close and smooth. Urban effects move slowly on them. In the survey, a majority of the respondents expressed traditional viewpoints regarding ancestor worship, xiao (or filial piety), loyalty, clan rituals and clan genealogy, reflecting historical continuity of culture. Although villagers are shifting from the big jia to the small jia, and individualism is rising, jia, being the foundation of the Chinese society and Chinese culture, continues to be of more importance than individuals. Cultural changes bear strong Chinese characteristics.
Keywords Clan culture Ideological modernization Urbanization Rural areas Anhui
Z. Tang (&) Auburn University at Montgomery, Montgomery, USA e-mail: [email protected] © Springer Nature Singapore Pte Ltd. 2017 Z. Tang (ed.), China’s Urbanization and Socioeconomic Impact, DOI 10.1007/978-981-10-4831-9_10
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Introduction
In this chapter, clan is referred to zongzu (宗族). To discuss clan and clan culture, we must first figure out what zongzu is. In Baihutong (《白虎通》) Ban Gu said, “Zong (宗) means persons who are respected. They are the common ancestors respected by their descendants.” Further, he said, “Zu (族) means a group of people who live together.” According to Erya Shiqin, (《尔雅释亲》) “A group of families based on patrilineal descent is called zongzu (宗族).” Thus, in understandings of the ancient Chinese, zongzu is a group of people or a group of families based on patrilineal descent and living together. Zongzu was the basic unit of traditional Chinese society, which can be considered a clan society. Chinese traditional culture that grew up in this society can be referred to as a zongzu culture, which mainly consists of ethics and morals in
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