Local Clan Communities in Rural China

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A01=Zongli Tang
Administrative Village
Ancestral Halls
anthropological fieldwork
Author_Zongli Tang
Basic Accounting Unit
Branch Hall
Category=GTM
Category=JBCC
Category=JHM
Category=NHF
Category=NHTB
China's clan system
Chinese kinship systems
Clan Affairs
clan community evolution modern China
Clan Culture
Clan Members
CPC Central Committee
Descent Relations
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eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Filial Piety
Genealogical Books
General Hall
GPCR
Late Qing
Local Clan
Local clan communities
Mao's political campaigns
Ming Dynasty
Pearl River Delta Region
peasant migration studies
Qing Dynasty
religious lineage structures
Republic Era
rural sociology
Single Surname Village
social transformation China
Socioeconomic Development
Southern Song Dynasty
Urbanisation
Wu Clan
Yangtze River
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367771089
  • Weight: 640g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 18 Jun 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Using data collected in fieldwork and surveys, this book examines China’s clan system and local clan communities in rural Anhui, covering events in two periods: the imperial pattern as seen in the first half of the twentieth century and changes since 1949. Revealed by this research, during the late Qing and the Republic Era, a local clan in the investigated areas was run as a highly autonomous community with a strong religious focus, which challenges the corporate model raised by Maurice Freedman. Through examining single-surname villages, citang constructions, and updating of genealogies, local clans in Huadong, Huizhou and the lower Yangtze River plains in particular, developed earlier than those in the Pearl River Delta Region. Taking a cross-disciplinary viewpoint, this book analyses changes in local clan communities and clan culture as brought by the Chinese Revolution, Mao’s political campaigns, and Deng’s reforms. Starting with the late 1990s, a large migration from villages to cities has rapidly altered rural China. This geographic mobility would undermine the common residence that serves as part of a clan’s foundation. Under such situation, what transformations have taken place or will affect China’s clan system? Will the system continue to revitalise or die out? Local Clan Communities in Rural China reports these events/transformations and attempts to answer these questions. Placing a special emphasis on issues that have been overlooked by prior studies, this book brings to light many new facts and interpretations and provides a valuable reference to scholars in fields of sociology, anthropology, history, economics, cultural studies, urban studies, and population studies.

Zongli Tang is Professor of Sociology at the College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences, Auburn University at Montgomery, USA. His research areas cover urban sociology, cultural studies, political economy, and population studies. His research works include China’s Urbanization and Socioeconomic Impact, Maoism and Chinese Culture, Ways of Philosophical Thinking in China and Japan, and China’s Foreign Economic Policy in Post-Mao Time.

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